Hello,

I just played with encrypting an org file, and I found a couple typos
and corrections for this page. I attach the patch that would fix them.

Best,

Alan

>From 6721b5dc19abdf02ad54e78c6edfa1d3ba26916d Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Alan Schmitt <alan.schm...@polytechnique.org>
Date: Wed, 31 Jul 2013 18:20:58 +0200
Subject: [PATCH] encrypting-files: fix typos

---
 org-tutorials/encrypting-files.org | 6 ++++--
 1 file changed, 4 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)

diff --git a/org-tutorials/encrypting-files.org b/org-tutorials/encrypting-files.org
index 74a04c4..a19bbe4 100644
--- a/org-tutorials/encrypting-files.org
+++ b/org-tutorials/encrypting-files.org
@@ -30,7 +30,9 @@ add the following to your .emacs:
 If you want to encrypt the whole file using gnupg, but still have the
 decrypted file recognized as an org file, you should make:
 
-B-*- mode:org; epa-file-encrypt-to: ("m...@mydomain.com") -*-
+#+BEGIN_SRC org
+  # -*- mode:org; epa-file-encrypt-to: ("m...@mydomain.com") -*-
+#+END_SRC
 
 the first line in the file. Where "m...@mydomain.com" is the email
 address associated with your default gnupg key. Note that gpg
@@ -47,7 +49,7 @@ Encryption, you require both your private key and your pass phrase.
 
 EasyPG can use both methods of encryption. If you want to use
 symmetric encryption omitting the "epa-file-encrypt-to:" from your
-.gpg file should do the trick. If this doesn't work, you may try
+.gpg file or setting it to ~nil~ should do the trick. If this doesn't work, you may try
 setting the variable:
 
 #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
-- 
1.8.2.1

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