Usenet quoting
When Usenet and e-mail users respond to a message, they often want to include some context for the discussion. This is often accomplished by quoting a portion of the original message using Usenet conventions. In essence the convention is to communicate in plain text format (not HTML) and quote with ">" at the beginning of each line, ">>" for a quote of quote, and so on. Most email clients can perform Usenet quoting automatically.
Examples
Usenet standard quoting refers to the practice of preceding the original message with the ">" (or right-angle bracket) character at the beginning of each line, and then inserting one's responses inline, using no special designator for the author's messages.
> hello, how are you? I am fine
When a second response is made to the second message, the second message is again quoting with >, perhaps causing parts of the original message to now be designated with >>. Such nested quotations can technically be continued indefinitely, but quickly become cumbersome.
>> hello, how are you?
> I am fine
Good, I am also fine.
Enhanced quoting (such as facilitating by the Emacs supercite module), includes more context by using the initials or a short form of the name. The program has to be careful not to quote already quoted material:
first> hello, how are you? I am fine.
first> hello, how are you? second> I am fine. Good, I am also fine.
It is often the case that it makes sense, particularly in the simple quoting case, to insert a note telling who said what:
Last Saturday, when the sun was nice, Second Guy said:
> Last thursday, while eating popcorn, First Guy said:
>> hello, how are you?
> I am fine
Good, I am also fine.
Canonical quoting
There is no standard declaring one way of quoting to be "right" and others to be "wrong", but some standards depend on conventions. The son-of-1036 draft recommends ">
" as the quote-prefix; RFC 3676 depends on it and considers ">>
" and "> >
" to be semantically different. That is, ">>
" has a quote-depth of two, while "> >
" has a quote-depth of one, quoting a line starting with ">". For these reasons, ">
" is often considered the "canonical" quote-prefix.
See also
- Top-quoting and other posting styles
- Diple (textual symbol)
- Nested quote
- Greater-than sign
References