On Tue, Oct 02, 2001 at 12:20:49AM +0200, Piet Delport ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> On Mon, 01 Oct 2001 at 11:19:43 -0500, David Champion wrote:
>
> You can do it a bit more elegantly[1] with this ex one-liner:
>
> 1;/^$/+1,$!gpg --clearsign
You might also want to redirect stderr to avoid putt
On Tue, Oct 02, 2001 at 12:20:49AM +0200, Piet Delport wrote:
> You can do it a bit more elegantly[1] with this ex one-liner:
>
> 1;/^$/+1,$!gpg --clearsign
Back in the old days days of PGP 2.x, someone pointed out that you can
use a couple of macros to handle common PGP operations within vi.
U
thanks for the great one-liner, piet ... that is why i read these lists
aloha,
dave
On Tue, Oct 02, 2001 at 12:20:49AM +0200, Piet Delport wrote:
> On Mon, 01 Oct 2001 at 11:19:43 -0500, David Champion wrote:
> > On 2001.10.01, in <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
> > "Frederik Vanrenterghem" <[EMAIL PRO
On Mon, 01 Oct 2001 at 11:19:43 -0500, David Champion wrote:
> On 2001.10.01, in <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
> "Frederik Vanrenterghem" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > I'm trying out some ways to clear text sign a message in mutt, using
> > :%!gpg -eas
> >
> > Unfortunately, all headers (including
On 2001.10.01, in <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
"Frederik Vanrenterghem" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I'm trying out some ways to clear text sign a message in mutt, using
> :%!gpg -eas
>
> Unfortunately, all headers (including "to") are signed, effectively
> making these headers useless. Is there
I'm trying out some ways to clear text sign a message in mutt, using
:%!gpg -eas
Unfortunately, all headers (including "to") are signed, effectively
making these headers useless. Is there a way to specify to this filter
only to sign/encrypt the actual message body?
--
Frederik Vanrenterghem