Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submitlogin

That is not how I write plain-text email, and I don't think most people do either.

I write links in plain-text emails as: www.example.com/awesome-video-of-kittens.jsp?referrer=whatever

Note in particular that I don't put http in front, nor do I provide an alternative title.



I don't get it, do you type the URLs by hand, or do you manually cut the http:// from what the browser gives you? Both options seem odd to me.


I didn't notice the browser ads the http.

Anyway it should still understand links without http because if I am typing the link out by hand (say because it is a site I remember) then I would still want it to be a link.


> I didn't notice the browser ads the http.

This is baffling for me. You are not new to the Internet, but until only quite recently, every single browser always showed the protocol is the address bar. Only of late did Google Chrome and then e.g. Mobile Safari remove “http://” from the display to save space; and yes, naturally they include this string when copy-pasting as doing otherwise would result in an incompletely pasted URI (protocols are not optional, except by current convention in non-hypertextual media).




Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: