But that wouldn't follow the email response instructions of posting your response above the previous email or lists where attachments are not allowed. It also requires putting the 'to-be-protected-text' in a separate file, on the same computer** or on the local computer (depending on which email system you are using) so it can be attached by the mailer.
** - if your examples are on one computer and your desktop is on another computer, you have to make sure the example ends up on the same computer your email client is running on (even if they might look the same as in the same versioned client running on a remote machine via 'X' as the one you normally run on. Sure it's all doable, if you aren't in a hurry and none of your defaults have changed, which is unlikely when you are using a temporary (hopefully) email system like gmail. Life is rarely perfect. on your desktop. On Wed, Jun 24, 2020 at 7:12 PM Dale R. Worley <wor...@alum.mit.edu> wrote: > If you have code to send and formatting is important, put it in a file > and attach it to the messages. Almost all mail systems transmit > attached files without damaging them. > > Dale >