-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 On Monday, September 24 at 12:50 AM, quoth P.M.: > Thank you very much for your reply.
You're quite welcome. > I apologize for not being too quick in grasping the advice you just > gave - being very new to this stuff - so please be patient with > me... No problem. > set pgp_sign_as=0x31577172 > set pgp --encrypt-to=0x31577172 > > What would seem elegant to me is to replace those key > values with a $VARIABLE that can be changed on the fly > by changing a single value in the macro sequences I > use to change return address, hostname, realname, Bcc > field, etc. for each email address I have. No, that would be silly. $pgp_sign_as *is* a variable that can be changed on the fly, so adding another one would be an extra redirection. Here's how you'd set it in a macro: macro index m '<enter-command>set pgp_sign_as=0x31577172<enter><mail>' I can mix that into your existing send-mail macro if you include that in your message. >> No, but you need to have the sign-as included in >> your pgp_*_command >> settings. For example, my pgp_encrypt_sign_command >> includes: >> >> %?a?-u %a? > > You lost me there... how that works goes beyond what I > am able to grasp at this time... Many mutt string variables that support formatting strings (such as %a) also support conditional formatting strings. Generally, if you include %a in a pgp command variable, it will be replaced by the sender of the email (e.g. [EMAIL PROTECTED], or whatever you've configured your pgp_sign_as to be). Thus, if you always set pgp_sign_as to something, you can put "-u %a" into your pgp command string (according to the gpg manual, -u means "sign as this user") and when "-u %a" is parsed by mutt, it becomes "-u [EMAIL PROTECTED]", or something similar. Now then, to be generic, to take care of situations when pgp_sign_as may not be set to anything, we have a conditional. A conditional format string is in the format "%? formatletter ? iftrue ?", in other words, the string "%?a?foo?" means "if %a would produce anything, then use 'foo', otherwise ignore this". So, "%?a?-u %a?" means "if %a is would produce anything, then use '-u %a'". Does that make sense? ~Kyle - -- Preach the Gospel at all times and when necessary use words. -- St. Francis of Assisi -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Comment: Thank you for using encryption! iD8DBQFG9zCKBkIOoMqOI14RAvs+AJwNDn598wJtfVK26zPPMVxj+Xfa+QCfSnsz U4Sza0dirByTz0528j2ZNwQ= =yG1E -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----