Info-Mac Archive Downloads: text/ TextProcessing

Back to text/ TextProcessing

emailcleaner.sit.hqx Convenient text cleaning on Emails and NewsGroup posts (email-cleaner.hqx)

Download email-cleaner.hqx (949,210 KB)


From: Theo
Subject: emailcleaner.sit.hqx Convenient text cleaning on Emails and NewsGroup posts

Email Cleaner 1.84
Convenient line re-wrapping on emails and NewsGroup posts.


Email Cleaner does line re-wrapping on badly wrapped emails and
NewsGroup-posts. Badly wrapped lines is a problem every Internet User
comes across, Email Cleaner solves it! Email Cleaner has other features:
Wrapping to any width, adding / removing quotes, adding spaces before
each line, turning HTML to text, extensive AppleScriptability.

€ Why Email Cleaner is good

Email Cleaner has a "floater", that floats above all of your other
windows, making it easily accessible anytime you are using your Mac
Put the insertion point anywhere inside the text that you want cleaned,
press "Clean" on the floater, and the whole text is cleaned.

Overall it is an intuitive, useful and flexible program.
 
€ Also features HTML file shrinking

Email Cleaner batch shrinks folders of HTML files, removing un-needed
lines and spaces. It knows to avoid pictures, programs and other non-text
files.

€ Who else thinks Email Cleaner is good

Email Cleaner got a 5 out of 5 rating from Tucows, a large shareware
distributor.

Email Cleaner has a lot of support for AppleScript.

It needs any PowerMac at all, and MacOS 7.5 or later.


An example of Email Cleaner at work, it converts text from this:

> >> Something to think about. In 1993, the CFA did some braking tests,
> >comparing a
> >> tanker (used for bushfires) with an EA Falcon. At 60km/h, the tanker
took
> >> 19.5m, the Falcon 12m. At 80km/h, the tanker took 30m, the Falcon 18m.
In
> >the
> >> wet at 60, the tanker took 25m, the Falcon 18m. So, where do you set
the
> >speed
> >> limit, and does one speed limit do all?


to this:

>>> Something to think about. In 1993, the CFA did some braking tests,
>>> comparing a tanker (used for bushfires) with an EA Falcon. At 60km/h,
>>> the tanker took 19.5m, the Falcon 12m. At 80km/h, the tanker took 30m,
>>> the Falcon 18m. In the wet at 60, the tanker took 25m, the Falcon 18m.
>>> So, where do you set the speed limit, and does one speed limit do all?