-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Viktor,
I agree with everything you say (though I do hope the story about rebinding the y-key was a joke). Your patch is important for the wide-spread use of PGP in non-english communication. I just checked that with your patch, I can finally use Mutt to sign messages in the iso-latin-1 charset in the traditional way and verify it in Pine. This is what I did exactly: - - compose message in ISO-Latin-1 - - using Mutt/1.3.25 with patch-1.3.15.sw.pgp-outlook.1 patch-1.3.24.vrr.force_traditional.1 - - sign traditionally inside Mutt calling GnuPG 1.0.6 with force-v3-sigs set using RSA key - - open message at work in Pine 4.44 - - message is successfully verified on opening by PGP-aware display filters (selfmade) calling PGP 2.6.3ia - - just to make shure: I can also verify the signature with GnuPG 1.0.6 by hitting ESC P in Mutt. Latin-1 characters such as German Umlauts, sharp s and Franco-German quotes like these: »äöüÄÖÜß« were still intact. My test email had the header line, ``Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit''. I don't know if there'll be problems if the message is transformed to quoted/printable by an MTA. Would somebody else check that please? > Okay, this was long. Could someone with inside knowledge of mutt and > the relevant standards please comment on this patch? I am not this person. This Email is signed the same way as described above. So you can try to verify it with whatever you use. Cheers, Cristian - -- }{ Cristian Pietsch }{ http://www.interling.de -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.0.6 (GNU/Linux) Comment: Weitere Infos: siehe http://www.gnupg.org iQCVAwUBPD98Pilhg9yhk42tAQGztQQApuEKOr8tf4sU9R9yVZPSEPHYffIW/NTf UzJtiZpr8CBBi20uwqJBZwlS2RnH4wAeeRdLdR7Q2tXUkV0RsBJMdRa87vYyrfPm IuP1vz4FjyicW3dtBycXRbm75GrjR3DeSxISBXSgMoHsYfDkm5rZ54njd1ATdsn4 DWxJsWLPvRw= =lHvr -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----