Nequaquam ut domain nomen quod email oratio ut semper ad lowercase certus adepto vos ubi vestri vultis abire? Aut hoc sit ad propositum? Ad protocollum Googles mail servers, exempli gratia, cum in novis occasus interesting effectus, quod ego breviter inducere in mox sequente articulo.
Google relatis, quae nuper coepi offering @ gmail.com oratio ad Germanica users Iuda, non autem pro temporibus, et intra parentheses orthographiam est, si sentit. Ergo totum hoc valet email oratio:
- davidvielhuber@gmail.com
- dav.id.v.iel.hu.ber@gmail.com
- DAVIDVIELHUBER@gmail.com
- David.Vielhuber@gmail.com
Et RFC MMDCCCXXI vexillum stipuletur quomodo Northmanni ut teneatur manu iste:
The local-part of a mailbox MUST BE treated as case sensitive. Therefore, SMTP implementations MUST take care to preserve the case of mailbox local-parts. Mailbox domains are not case sensitive. In particular, for some hosts the user "smith" is different from the user "Smith". However, exploiting the case sensitivity of mailbox local-parts impedes interoperability and is discouraged.
Et hoc modo domain nomen quod causa est, minime post bracket simia simia et locorum pars bracket est in conspectu cave litteras maiusculas minusculasque. In pluribus casibus tamen mail servers valde patiens. Ego semper suadeo vobis scribere domain nomen quod email oratio et causa in inferiore.
A parvam partem tu quoque an additional add @ oratio recta fronte est, quod sit neglecta per partum (et igitur non possunt, exempli gratia, pro regula-of emails secundum filtering):
- davidvielhuber+ganz-wichtig@gmail.com
- davidvielhuber+newsletter@gmail.com
- davidvielhuber+gewinnspiel@gmail.com