[ Usenet FAQs | Search | Web FAQs | Documents | RFC Index ]
Single Page
Top Document: Answers to Frequently Asked Questions about Usenet
Previous Document: How do I use the "Distribution" feature?
Next Document: What is the address or phone number of the "foo" company?
-
Search the FAQ Archives
Single Page
Top Document: Answers to Frequently Asked Questions about Usenet
Previous Document: How do I use the "Distribution" feature?
Next Document: What is the address or phone number of the "foo" company?
Why do some people put funny lines ("bug killers") at the beginning of their articles?
Some earlier versions (mid-80s) of news had a bug which would
drop the first 512 or 1024 bytes of text of certain articles.
The bug was triggered whenever the article started with
whitespace (a blank or a tab). A fix many people adopted was to
begin their articles with a line containing a character other
than white space. This gradually evolved into the habit of
including amusing first lines.
The original bug has since been fixed in newer version of news,
and sites running older versions of news have applied a patch to
prevent articles from losing text. The "bug-killer" lines are
therefore probably no longer needed, but they linger on.
Top Document: Answers to Frequently Asked Questions about Usenet
Previous Document: How do I use the "Distribution" feature?
Next Document: What is the address or phone number of the "foo" company?
Single Page
[ Usenet FAQs | Search | Web FAQs | Documents | RFC Index ]
Send corrections/additions to the FAQ Maintainer:
netannounce@deshaw.com (Mark Moraes)
Last Update September 06 2008 @ 00:13 AM