Re: Suggestion for better message list view reading
Good afternoon MAU ! On Fri, 3 Oct 2003 13:23:18 +0200 GMT your local time, which was 03.10.2003, 13:23 (GMT+0200) where I live, you (MAU MAU) wrote in mid:[EMAIL PROTECTED]: I'm already used to the rudeness and unfriendliness of this list. While I may somewhat agree with you that the list is perhaps a bit obsessive about cut lines, etc., Not even this, compared to other TB-lists I *strongly* disagree on rudeness and unfriendliness. Much the contrary. Fully ACK!! I always use TBUDL as a a good example for being friendly and not rude at all!! Thank you to all mods and members of TBUDL! -- Best regards, Gerd === Tutorial for using regular expressions with TheBat! www.regenechsen.de --- Left to themselves, things tend to go from bad to worse. --- now playing: WDR2 :-) Current version is 2.00.6 | Using TBUDL information: http://www.silverstones.com/thebat/TBUDLInfo.html
Re: subpattern returned by %REGEXPTEXT
Good evening Michael L. Cusac ! On Thu, 2 Oct 2003 10:47:02 -0500 GMT your local time, which was 02.10.2003, 17:47 (GMT+0200) where I live, you (Michael Cusac) wrote in mid:[EMAIL PROTECTED]: I thought that %REGEXPTEXT captured the highest numbered subpattern, in this case 2, but it seems to be capturing subpattern 1. I'm quite sure it does. Try this: ^subject:\s(?:\*\*\*\sGMX\sSpamverdacht\s\*\*\*\s)?(.*?)$ This escapes the first parentheses and it does not count as a subpattern [...] And if I want to capture a subpattern other than 0 or 1 I will have to use %SETPATTREGEXP, %REGEXPBLINDMATCH, and %SUBPATT ? Try %SETPATTREGEXP=^subject:\s(\*\*\*\sGMX\sSpamverdacht\s\*\*\*\s)?(.*?)$%- %REGEXPBLINDMATCH=%HEADER%- %SUBPATT=2 I hope the macro is %HEADER?? HTH -- Best regards, Gerd === Tutorial for using regular expressions with TheBat! www.regenechsen.de --- I am a human being: Do not fold, spindle or mutilate: Hippy slogan. --- now playing: WDR2 :-) Current version is 2.00.6 | Using TBUDL information: http://www.silverstones.com/thebat/TBUDLInfo.html
Re: Open pgp version support
Good evening Andrew Hodgson ! On Sun, 21 Sep 2003 15:05:48 +0100 GMT your local time, which was 21.09.2003, 16:05 (GMT+0200) where I live, you (Andrew Hodgson) wrote in mid:[EMAIL PROTECTED]: gbumi http://ipgpp.veniece.com/ Which will lead to: ftp://ftp.zedz.net/pub/crypto/pgp/pgp60/pgp658_ckt/ Funny: both links do not let me download ;-)) First one does not know any URL that provides the download and the second one never ever connects to a server :-/ Any ideas? Is there anyone who offers a download? Or could someone send me the build8 via PM? TIA -- Best regards, Gerd === Tutorial for using regular expressions with TheBat! www.regenechsen.de --- Black holes are where God is dividing by zero. --- now playing: WDR2 :-) Current version is 2.00 | Using TBUDL information: http://www.silverstones.com/thebat/TBUDLInfo.html
Re: Open pgp version support
Good evening Barry Wilkinson ! On Sun, 21 Sep 2003 17:49:32 +0100 GMT your local time, which was 21.09.2003, 18:49 (GMT+0200) where I live, you (Barry Wilkinson) wrote in mid:[EMAIL PROTECTED]: Funny: both links do not let me download ;-)) I used the posted url in ws_ftp. This allowed me an anonymous login at this url, and was able to download 6.5.8ckt. I suggest you try to ftp from this site as the file is around 6.5MB. That was it! Thanks. YMMD! Download still active ;-) -- Best regards, Gerd === Tutorial for using regular expressions with TheBat! www.regenechsen.de --- No man's life, liberty, or property is safe while the legislature is in session. (Judge Gideon J. Tucker, 1866.) --- now playing: WDR2 :-) Current version is 2.00 | Using TBUDL information: http://www.silverstones.com/thebat/TBUDLInfo.html
Re:2.00: bug in Scheduler
Good evening Sean Rima ! On Sat, 6 Sep 2003 18:32:08 +0100 GMT your local time, which was 06.09.2003, 19:32 (GMT+0200) where I live, you (Sean Rima) wrote in mid:[EMAIL PROTECTED]: Darn, I grabbed 2 yesterday :) *argghh* I d/loaded this afternoon and it is Version 2.00 So, where did you find the 2.00.1?? -- Best regards, Gerd === Tutorial for using regular expressions with TheBat! www.regenechsen.de --- People with narrow minds usually have broad tongues. --- now playing: WDR2 :-) Current version is 2.00 | Using TBUDL information: http://www.silverstones.com/thebat/TBUDLInfo.html
Regex-Tutorial Update
Good evening Batsmen, I just want to let you know that I updated the Regex-tutorial on http://www.regenechsen.de/regex_en/regex_1_en.html and -of course- there is a PDF-download available. Together with Marck who helped me with the translation I added some regex-examples. Thanks to Marck who made this newer version possible. If you have any suggestions feel free to write via PM. THX. -- Best regards, Gerd == Tutorial for using regular expressions with TheBat! www.regenechsen.de The 4 Basic Food Groups: Ice Cream, Pizza, Coke and Women. now playing: WDR2 :-) Current version is 2.00 | Using TBUDL information: http://www.silverstones.com/thebat/TBUDLInfo.html
Re:Bat will no longer launch without /nologo
Good evening Jamie Dainton ! On Sat, 6 Sep 2003 20:05:15 +0100 GMT your local time, which was 06.09.2003, 21:05 (GMT+0200) where I live, you (Jamie Dainton) wrote in mid:[EMAIL PROTECTED]: This is an odd one. I've just upgraded to the latest version of TB! It worked perfectly. I then installed the international pack and selected use multilingual interface and British English spelling. If I try to launch TB! without the /nologo option the splash screen appears and disappears but no TB! Running on WinXP Pro, Bayesit0.4dm installed and nothing else running. W2K, Version 2.00: No Problem here. It still works, only that I used capital letters. /NOLOGO. -- Best regards, Gerd === Tutorial for using regular expressions with TheBat! www.regenechsen.de --- Some people want to achieve immortality through their works or their descendants. I prefer to achieve immortality by not dying. Woody Allen. --- now playing: WDR2 :-) Current version is 2.00 | Using TBUDL information: http://www.silverstones.com/thebat/TBUDLInfo.html
Re: Automated response(?)
Good evening Marck D Pearlstone ! On Fri, 13 Jun 2003 17:35:08 +0100 GMT your local time, which was 13.06.2003, 18:35 (GMT+0200) where I live, you (Marck Pearlstone) wrote in mid:[EMAIL PROTECTED]: DG It is my understanding that email addresses, even in message DG bodies, are now concealed in the TBUDL web archives. Can anyone DG confirm? Confirmed. :-))) Hmmm, sorry, but are you sure? Here is the source code of the last message in the archive [I deleted the mail address, please check yourself] : ,-- [ http://www.mail-archive.com/[EMAIL PROTECTED]/msg57980.html ] | !-- MHonArc v2.6.3 -- | !--X-Subject: Re: PC Lock ups and generally slow performance of The Bat! -- | !--X-From-R13: Xbua [befr cntrznxreNfrzb.arg -- | !--X-Date: Wed, 04 Jun 2003 07:22:35 #45;0700 -- | !--X-Message-Id: [EMAIL PROTECTED] -- | ^ Look here ^ | !--X-Content-Type: text/plain -- | !--X-Reference: [EMAIL PROTECTED] -- | ^ Look here^ | !--X-Head-End-- '-- The header of the mail I received [mail address deleted]: ,-- [ no msg id ;-)) ] | Message-ID: [EMAIL PROTECTED] | | In-Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] | References: [EMAIL PROTECTED] '-- These are not the real mail addresses but you know what I mean. Nevertheless: I never received any spam with my list-addresses but with others. Not even those addresses which are uploaded on the keyservers with my various PGP-keys received any spam. This may be an indication that concealing the address the way MHonarc does it could be sufficient P.S.: I deleted the domains in the above examples to avoid further possible discussion why I published John's address. -- Best regards, Gerd === Tutorial for using regular expressions with TheBat! www.regenechsen.de --- A user-friendly computer first requires a friendly user. --- now playing: WDR2 :-) Current version is 1.62r | Using TBUDL information: http://www.silverstones.com/thebat/TBUDLInfo.html
Re: Spam mistery!
Good evening Csaba Kiss ! On Fri, 13 Jun 2003 21:35:44 +0200 GMT your local time, which was 13.06.2003, 21:35 (GMT+0200) where I live, you (Csaba Kiss) wrote in mid:[EMAIL PROTECTED]: I solved it myself. These are only html comments with random letters. The sentence is scattered all over among the comments. *gg* Not random ;-)) They make sense: copy the whole into a file, save it, named whateveryoulike.htm and open it with a browser: I heard the shower going and saw her clothes laying on the floor , when I peeked in . I got my courage up an click here to unsubscribe ^^^LINK^^^ *gg* ;-)) -- Best regards, Gerd === Tutorial for using regular expressions with TheBat! www.regenechsen.de --- Murphy's Gesetz: Konstruiere ein System, das selbst ein Irrer anwenden kann, und so wird es auch nur ein Irrer anwenden wollen. --- now playing: WDR2 :-) Current version is 1.62r | Using TBUDL information: http://www.silverstones.com/thebat/TBUDLInfo.html
Re: %Language Macro lock-ups
Good afternoon Roberto Machorro ! On Wed, 4 Jun 2003 10:55:48 -0400 GMT your local time, which was 04.06.2003, 16:55 (GMT+0200) where I live, you (Roberto Machorro) wrote in mid:[EMAIL PROTECTED]: %Language=Spanish Wrong syntax? Only a guess, but my help file says %LANGUAGE=SP ^^ for Spanish ;-)) -- Best regards, Gerd === Tutorial for using regular expressions with TheBat! www.regenechsen.de --- Drugs may lead to nowhere, but at least it's the scenic route. --- now playing: WDR2 :-) Current version is 1.62r | Using TBUDL information: http://www.silverstones.com/thebat/TBUDLInfo.html
Re: Vote fot TheBat !
Good evening Miguel A. Urech ! On Thu, 13 Mar 2003 16:49:28 +0100 GMT your local time, which was 13.03.2003, 16:49 (GMT+0100) where I live, you (Miguel Urech) wrote in mid:[EMAIL PROTECTED]: Yeah, right. And the sad part is that if it was really a vote, OE would probably win ;-) Well, I don't think that it is a question of win or lose. It is a survey which shows which product is used most (ok, ok: by those who found the page ;-)). And when I voted TB had approx. 10% of 2001. About 75% of all used either Lookout, OE or TB. IMHO this is a good result and should give Ritlabs information about their product. And they should keep this in mind ;-)) -- Best regards, Gerd === Tutorial for using regular expressions with TheBat! www.regenechsen.de --- The Americans have need of the telephone, but we do not. We have plenty of messenger boys. Sir William Preece, chief engineer of the British Post Office, 1876 --- now playing: WDR2 :-) Current version is 1.62 | Using TBUDL information: http://www.silverstones.com/thebat/TBUDLInfo.html
Re: Countdown Clock for signature???
Good evening Peter Meyns ! On Tue, 4 Mar 2003 22:56:20 +0100 GMT your local time, which was 04.03.2003, 22:56 (GMT+0100) where I live, you (Peter Meyns) wrote in mid:[EMAIL PROTECTED]: Wow, that's a lot of stuff. Too much for me to understand and too much for TBUDL perhaps? TBTECH might be the better place... *s* You are perfectly right. That is why I answered, but didn't explain (although I am afraid, I couldn't anyway). And furthermore, I couldn't assume that Newsacct is TBTECH-member. *gg* -- Best regards, Gerd === Tutorial for using regular expressions with TheBat! www.regenechsen.de --- Abstinence is a good thing if practiced in moderation --- now playing: WDR2 :-) Current version is 1.62 | Using TBUDL information: http://www.silverstones.com/thebat/TBUDLInfo.html
Re: Countdown Clock for signature???
Good evening Newsacct ! On Tue, 4 Mar 2003 15:54:44 -0500 GMT your local time, which was 04.03.2003, 21:54 (GMT+0100) where I live, you (Newsacct Newsacct) wrote in mid:[EMAIL PROTECTED]: I was hoping all you experts with the templates and regular expressions could help me figure out how to do a countdown clock in my signature. In this case, we are going to Disney in September and I want to say something like, 144 days, 12 hours, 34 minutes till we leave for Disney! Well, I can't provide counting hours, but I wrote something about counting down days: ,-- [ [EMAIL PROTECTED] ] | ok, here we go: there is a set of macros you need to get the days | counted. I didn't write these (Carsten, was it you?) nevertheless it | counts days in the future but it also works on past events. | | 1. QT datediff | | %If:_%Comment_=_%Date='mmdd'_:%- | _%comment=a%Comment%-b%Date='mmdd'c0;_:%- | _%comment=a%date='mmdd'b%Comment%c0;_%- | %qinclude=datediff_r%- | %comment= | | | 2. QT datediff_addmonth | | %If:%SetPattRegexp='b(..)'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'=12:%- | %Calc=!%SetPattRegexp='b()'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'+1!:%- | %SetPattRegexp='b()'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'%- | %If:%SetPattRegexp='b(..)'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'=01:02%- | %If:%SetPattRegexp='b(..)'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'=02:03%- | %If:%SetPattRegexp='b(..)'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'=03:04%- | %If:%SetPattRegexp='b(..)'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'=04:05%- | %If:%SetPattRegexp='b(..)'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'=05:06%- | %If:%SetPattRegexp='b(..)'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'=06:07%- | %If:%SetPattRegexp='b(..)'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'=07:08%- | %If:%SetPattRegexp='b(..)'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'=08:09%- | %If:%SetPattRegexp='b(..)'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'=09:10%- | %If:%SetPattRegexp='b(..)'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'=10:11%- | %If:%SetPattRegexp='b(..)'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'=11:12%- | %If:%SetPattRegexp='b(..)'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'=12:01%- | %SetPattRegexp='b..(..)'%RegexpMatch='%Comment' | | | 3. QT: datediff_days | | %If:%SetPattRegexp='b(..)'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'=01:31%- | %If:%SetPattRegexp='b(..)'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'=03:31%- | %If:%SetPattRegexp='b(..)'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'=04:30%- | %If:%SetPattRegexp='b(..)'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'=05:31%- | %If:%SetPattRegexp='b(..)'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'=06:30%- | %If:%SetPattRegexp='b(..)'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'=07:31%- | %If:%SetPattRegexp='b(..)'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'=08:31%- | %If:%SetPattRegexp='b(..)'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'=09:30%- | %If:%SetPattRegexp='b(..)'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'=10:31%- | %If:%SetPattRegexp='b(..)'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'=11:30%- | %If:%SetPattRegexp='b(..)'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'=12:31%- | %If:%SetPattRegexp='b(..)'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'=02:%- | %If:_%SetPattRegexp=$\D$%RegexpMatch=$%- | %Calc=#%SetPattRegexp='b()'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'/4#$_=__:%- | _%If:#%SetPattRegexp='b..(..)'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'#=#00#:%- | #%If:~%SetPattRegexp='b(28|24|20|16|12|08|04|00)'%- | %RegexpMatch='%Comment'~~~:~29~:~28~#:%- | #29#_:_28_ | | | 4. QT: datediff_r | | %REM=Test, ist MM der beiden Datumswerte identisch?%- | %IF:%- | %SetPattRegexp='a(..)'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'=%- | %SetPattRegexp='b(..)'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'%- | :%- | %Rem='Tage addieren/subtrahieren'%- | %Calc=_%- | %SetPattRegexp='c(.*?);'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'%- | +%SetPattRegexp='a..(..)'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'%- | -%SetPattRegexp='b..(..)'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'_%- | :%- | %Rem='Monate in Tage umrechnen'%- | %Comment='%SetPattRegexp=_(a.*b)_%RegExpMatch=_%Comment_%- | %QInclude=!datediff_addmonth!%- | c%Calc=!%QInclude=#datediff_days# + %SetPattRegexp=_c(.*?);_%RegexpMatch=_%Comment_!;'%- | %QInclude=!datediff_r!%- | | | | 5. QT: Differenz | | %Comment=20020101%- | Since %Qinclude=datediff days we are a couple | '-- HTH -- Best regards, Gerd === Tutorial for using regular expressions with TheBat! www.regenechsen.de --- Reading is sometimes an ingenious device for avoiding thought. --- now playing: WDR2 :-) Current version is 1.62 | Using TBUDL information: http://www.silverstones.com/thebat/TBUDLInfo.html
Re: LoVe Cock ?
Good afternoon D De Villiers ! On Sat, 1 Mar 2003 11:44:18 +0200 GMT your local time, which was 01.03.2003, 10:44 (GMT+0100) where I live, you (D Villiers) wrote in mid:[EMAIL PROTECTED]: I want to add a LoVe Clock counter to all outgoing TB! emails, which list the amount of year(s), month(s), week(s) day(s) since me and my gf (future whife) been together :-) How can I do this in TB! ? I tried %IF, %CALC DATE macros but unsuccessful. You were lucky that my spam filter did not see your subject *lol* ok, here we go: there is a set of macros you need to get the days counted. I didn't write these (Carsten, was it you?) nevertheless it counts days in the future but it also works on past events. 1. QT datediff %If:_%Comment_=_%Date='mmdd'_:%- _%comment=a%Comment%-b%Date='mmdd'c0;_:%- _%comment=a%date='mmdd'b%Comment%c0;_%- %qinclude=datediff_r%- %comment= 2. QT datediff_addmonth %If:%SetPattRegexp='b(..)'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'=12:%- %Calc=!%SetPattRegexp='b()'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'+1!:%- %SetPattRegexp='b()'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'%- %If:%SetPattRegexp='b(..)'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'=01:02%- %If:%SetPattRegexp='b(..)'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'=02:03%- %If:%SetPattRegexp='b(..)'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'=03:04%- %If:%SetPattRegexp='b(..)'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'=04:05%- %If:%SetPattRegexp='b(..)'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'=05:06%- %If:%SetPattRegexp='b(..)'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'=06:07%- %If:%SetPattRegexp='b(..)'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'=07:08%- %If:%SetPattRegexp='b(..)'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'=08:09%- %If:%SetPattRegexp='b(..)'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'=09:10%- %If:%SetPattRegexp='b(..)'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'=10:11%- %If:%SetPattRegexp='b(..)'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'=11:12%- %If:%SetPattRegexp='b(..)'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'=12:01%- %SetPattRegexp='b..(..)'%RegexpMatch='%Comment' 3. QT: datediff_days %If:%SetPattRegexp='b(..)'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'=01:31%- %If:%SetPattRegexp='b(..)'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'=03:31%- %If:%SetPattRegexp='b(..)'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'=04:30%- %If:%SetPattRegexp='b(..)'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'=05:31%- %If:%SetPattRegexp='b(..)'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'=06:30%- %If:%SetPattRegexp='b(..)'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'=07:31%- %If:%SetPattRegexp='b(..)'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'=08:31%- %If:%SetPattRegexp='b(..)'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'=09:30%- %If:%SetPattRegexp='b(..)'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'=10:31%- %If:%SetPattRegexp='b(..)'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'=11:30%- %If:%SetPattRegexp='b(..)'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'=12:31%- %If:%SetPattRegexp='b(..)'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'=02:%- %If:_%SetPattRegexp=$\D$%RegexpMatch=$%- %Calc=#%SetPattRegexp='b()'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'/4#$_=__:%- _%If:#%SetPattRegexp='b..(..)'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'#=#00#:%- #%If:~%SetPattRegexp='b(28|24|20|16|12|08|04|00)'%- %RegexpMatch='%Comment'~~~:~29~:~28~#:%- #29#_:_28_ 4. QT: datediff_r %REM=Test, ist MM der beiden Datumswerte identisch?%- %IF:%- %SetPattRegexp='a(..)'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'=%- %SetPattRegexp='b(..)'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'%- :%- %Rem='Tage addieren/subtrahieren'%- %Calc=_%- %SetPattRegexp='c(.*?);'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'%- +%SetPattRegexp='a..(..)'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'%- -%SetPattRegexp='b..(..)'%RegexpMatch='%Comment'_%- :%- %Rem='Monate in Tage umrechnen'%- %Comment='%SetPattRegexp=_(a.*b)_%RegExpMatch=_%Comment_%- %QInclude=!datediff_addmonth!%- c%Calc=!%QInclude=#datediff_days# + %SetPattRegexp=_c(.*?);_%RegexpMatch=_%Comment_!;'%- %QInclude=!datediff_r!%- 5. QT: Differenz %Comment=20020101%- Since %Qinclude=datediff days we are a couple Does this help? -- Best regards, Gerd === Tutorial for using regular expressions with TheBat! www.regenechsen.de --- Erwerbsregel #42 Verhandle nur, wenn Du sicher bist, Gewinn zu machen. --- now playing: WDR2 :-) Current version is 1.62 | Using TBUDL information: http://www.silverstones.com/thebat/TBUDLInfo.html
Re: Folder Specific Reader Setup
Good afternoon Mark Partous ! On Wed, 26 Feb 2003 11:51:12 +0100 GMT your local time, which was 26.02.2003, 11:51 (GMT+0100) where I live, you (Mark Partous) wrote in mid:[EMAIL PROTECTED]: I'm not a programmer myself, but would it be very difficult to provide the option to set the reader to automatically read HTML (override the general setup) on a folder-basis? Did you try: Options, Preferences, Viewer,RTF/HTML ?? HTH -- Best regards, Gerd === Tutorial for using regular expressions with TheBat! www.regenechsen.de --- Bad command. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaay! --- now playing: WDR2 :-) Current version is 1.62 | Using TBUDL information: http://www.silverstones.com/thebat/TBUDLInfo.html
Re: Folder Specific Reader Setup
Good afternoon Mark Partous ! On Wed, 26 Feb 2003 12:17:48 +0100 GMT your local time, which was 26.02.2003, 12:17 (GMT+0100) where I live, you (Mark Partous) wrote in mid:[EMAIL PROTECTED]: [...] GE HTH Unless I'm doing something completely wrong, that changes TB's behaviour for ALL folders!?? Haven't tried it yet, but I assume: yes! I couldn't find any option for folders only. Furthermore I think there is no options for accounts only :-/ -- Best regards, Gerd === Tutorial for using regular expressions with TheBat! www.regenechsen.de --- Application has reported a 'Not My Fault' in module KRNL.EXE in line 0200:103F --- now playing: WDR2 :-) Current version is 1.62 | Using TBUDL information: http://www.silverstones.com/thebat/TBUDLInfo.html
Re: PC-cillin vs the Bat
Hello Mjs720 ! On Thu, 20 Feb 2003 09:01:18 -0800 GMT your local time, which was 20.02.2003, 18:01 (GMT+0100) where I live, you (Mjs720 Mjs720) wrote in [EMAIL PROTECTED]:">mid:[EMAIL PROTECTED]: M I experiencing some difficulties with the Bat v1.62 and PC-cillin M '03. Every time PC-cillin is active and I attempt to use the Bat...I M experience the Bat slowing down and locking up. [description] AM What OS are you running? Win '98 SE AM What is your system RAM size and processor speed? AMD 800 Mhz; 384 RAM Can't confirm that. I use 533MHz, 256 MB RAM, POP3 enabled and Firewall. No probs here for ages. Only that I use w2k -- Best regards, Gerd === Tutorial for using regular expressions with TheBat! www.regenechsen.de --- Je mehr ich von den Menschen zu Gesicht bekomme, desto mehr bewundere ich die Hunde. Madame Roland --- now playing: Tori Amos - Cornflake Girl Current version is 1.62 | Using TBUDL information: http://www.silverstones.com/thebat/TBUDLInfo.html
Re: Filter, To: Me, and only me, no-one else in the to line ?
Hello ~John ! On Tue, 4 Feb 2003 13:47:53 -0600 GMT your local time, which was 04.02.2003, 20:47 (GMT+0100) where I live, you (~John ~John) wrote in [EMAIL PROTECTED]:">mid:[EMAIL PROTECTED]: How would I filter out any message that is addressed to myself and has other addresses also in the to: line ? For example, I want to filter all email that has been sent to me with my address in with several others, like this: To: [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED] Not tested: enter (?m)^To:\s*[EMAIL PROTECTED]$ as condition, location kludges, Presence yes. Goto the tab folder Options and check Regexp Hope that helps. As I said before: not tested -- Best regards, Gerd === Tutorial for using regular expressions with TheBat! www.regenechsen.de --- Love your neighbour, yet pull not down your hedge. --- now playing: WDR2 :-) Current version is 1.62 | Using TBUDL information: http://www.silverstones.com/thebat/TBUDLInfo.html
Re: How to enable threaded views?
Hello Daniel Grunberg ! On Thu, 30 Jan 2003 09:26:03 -0500 GMT your local time, which was 30.01.2003, 15:26 (GMT+0100) where I live, you (Daniel Grunberg) wrote in [EMAIL PROTECTED]:">mid:[EMAIL PROTECTED]: Highlight any(!) message in the list. Then: [Ctrl] + [*] expands all(!) messages. [Ctrl] + [Shift] + [*] collapses all(!) message threads. Right, but then you already have to enabled Threaded View :-) So first you need Alt-1 to switch this mode on ;-) -- Best regards, Gerd === Tutorial for using regular expressions with TheBat! www.regenechsen.de --- I have made mistakes, but have never made the mistake of claiming I never made one. James G. Bennet --- now playing: WDR2 :-) Current version is 1.62 | Using TBUDL information: http://www.silverstones.com/thebat/TBUDLInfo.html
Re: Extract Email Adresses from bounced messages
Hello Vanessa Montagne ! On Wed, 29 Jan 2003 12:14:31 +0100 GMT your local time, which was 29.01.2003, 12:14 (GMT+0100) where I live, you (Vanessa Montagne) wrote in [EMAIL PROTECTED]:">mid:[EMAIL PROTECTED]: [...] so the email address I will collect is in the text. I can identify the messages as the have the same header. But how can I extract the email out of the main text??? And add it to my address book so I can delete these addresses out of my mailing list. Any ideas? Well, the following macro-regex-combination should give you the email address as quoted text. %QUOTES=%SETPATTREGEXP=(.*?):%REGEXPMATCH=%TEXT I'm not sure what you want to do with the address. You should explain this if it wasn't for quoting ;-) -- Best regards, Gerd === Tutorial for using regular expressions with TheBat! www.regenechsen.de --- Never forget that your weapon is made by the lowest bidder! --- now playing: WDR2 :-) Current version is 1.62 | Using TBUDL information: http://www.silverstones.com/thebat/TBUDLInfo.html
Re: Extract Email Adresses from bounced messages
Hello Vanessa Montagne ! On Wed, 29 Jan 2003 13:44:30 +0100 GMT your local time, which was 29.01.2003, 13:44 (GMT+0100) where I live, you (Vanessa Montagne) wrote in [EMAIL PROTECTED]:">mid:[EMAIL PROTECTED]: it isn't for quoting, it is to collect these email addresses into an AdressBook of The Bat, and then i can export this address book and copy the addresses into my Mailer(Mojo Mail) to remove the wrong/expired/... email adresses. How to use such a macro combination ?? Well, I think there is no macro that saves text or parts of text to your disk except a filter that is able to append text to a textfile. So how to do it: in your filter there is a possibility to save the mail to a file. Go to incoming filter, tab Actions, Export message to file, Format Text. There you define the filename and the path to save it. Just to the right you find the chance to define the template which is used to save the mail. Replace this with %REGEXPTEXT=(.*?@.*?): I would suggest to check the box append to existing file and your addresses will be collected in that file. Is it that what you wanted? ;-) -- Best regards, Gerd === Tutorial for using regular expressions with TheBat! www.regenechsen.de --- No poor bastard ever won a war by dying for his country. He won it by making other bastards die for their country. (George Smith Patton) --- now playing: WDR2 :-) Current version is 1.62 | Using TBUDL information: http://www.silverstones.com/thebat/TBUDLInfo.html
Re: me and my filters again!
Hello Jurgen Haug ! On Wed, 29 Jan 2003 13:42:04 +0100 GMT your local time, which was 29.01.2003, 13:42 (GMT+0100) where I live, you (Jurgen Haug) wrote in [EMAIL PROTECTED]:">mid:[EMAIL PROTECTED]: I understand, that \s means looking for a white space, and I think .* means just any characters between 'from' and 'mailing' (because I noticed that a lot use that phrase with little differentiations. You told your filter to use regular expressions? In your filter, tab options -- Best regards, Gerd === Tutorial for using regular expressions with TheBat! www.regenechsen.de --- As a general rule, it is the people who call you paranoid that really ARE out to get you!VBEG\ F. Michael Zimmerman in PGP-Basics --- now playing: WDR2 :-) Current version is 1.62 | Using TBUDL information: http://www.silverstones.com/thebat/TBUDLInfo.html
Re: me and my filters again!
Hello Jurgen Haug ! On Wed, 29 Jan 2003 14:27:57 +0100 GMT your local time, which was 29.01.2003, 14:27 (GMT+0100) where I live, you (Jurgen Haug) wrote in [EMAIL PROTECTED]:">mid:[EMAIL PROTECTED]: You told your filter to use regular expressions? In your filter, tab options let me check ;-) yup, it's checked. so in your opinion it should work, huh? *tearing out hear* *grmpfl* The regex matches your text, that is tested with the regex tester. And you have set the filter with the following conditions? StringsLocation Presence unsubscribe\sfrom.*mailing\slist Text yes and no other condition? :-/ -- Best regards, Gerd === Tutorial for using regular expressions with TheBat! www.regenechsen.de --- Air-conditioned environment - do NOT open Windows. --- now playing: WDR2 :-) Current version is 1.62 | Using TBUDL information: http://www.silverstones.com/thebat/TBUDLInfo.html
Re: me and my filters again!
Hello Jurgen Haug ! On Wed, 29 Jan 2003 15:14:23 +0100 GMT your local time, which was 29.01.2003, 15:14 (GMT+0100) where I live, you (Jurgen Haug) wrote in [EMAIL PROTECTED]:">mid:[EMAIL PROTECTED]: well, here we go: BeginFilter [...] EndFilter Hmm, I will read this one later I bet the error waves with both hands at you, but it doesn't at me O:-) btw how do I make the regex not mind about a new line break? (?s)apologies.*if\s+you\s+have\s+been\s+sent.*this\s+email\s+in\s+error.*removal.*request For further explanation I would like to redirect you to: ,-- [ http://www.regenechsen.de/regex_en/regex_4_en.html ] | s for DotAll | | As we learned in one of the first chapters, the dot matches any | character other than the newline character. Once this option is set, | the dot matches newlines as well. But this is not actually the whole | truth: the newline will also be matched by all negated character | classes that do not include the newline, e.g.: [^x] matches | everything except the character 'x': that includes any newline. '-- My, this RegEx/Filter thing gives me headaches, but until you guys start screaming at me, I will try to get the gist of it! LOL Just have a look at the regex-tutorial at www.regenechsen.de for that one. Maybe this helps -- Best regards, Gerd === Tutorial for using regular expressions with TheBat! www.regenechsen.de --- God wisely designed the human body so that we can neither pat our own backs nor kick ourselves too easily. unknown --- now playing: WDR2 :-) Current version is 1.62 | Using TBUDL information: http://www.silverstones.com/thebat/TBUDLInfo.html
Re: me and my filters again!
Hello Jurgen Haug ! On Wed, 29 Jan 2003 15:14:23 +0100 GMT your local time, which was 29.01.2003, 15:14 (GMT+0100) where I live, you (Jurgen Haug) wrote in [EMAIL PROTECTED]:">mid:[EMAIL PROTECTED]: well, here we go: BeginFilter Ooops, there is not another filter that could match your unsubscribe-mail before this spam filter gets it? To be honest, I can't see why your filter shouldn't work. I created a mail with the text you wrote and it was filtered as ecpected... -- Best regards, Gerd === Tutorial for using regular expressions with TheBat! www.regenechsen.de --- Beware of little expenses; a small leak will sink a great ship. Benjamin Franklin --- now playing: WDR2 :-) Current version is 1.62 | Using TBUDL information: http://www.silverstones.com/thebat/TBUDLInfo.html
Re: me and my filters again!
Hello Jurgen Haug ! On Wed, 29 Jan 2003 15:43:04 +0100 GMT your local time, which was 29.01.2003, 15:43 (GMT+0100) where I live, you (Jurgen Haug) wrote in [EMAIL PROTECTED]:">mid:[EMAIL PROTECTED]: For further explanation I would like to redirect you to: ,-- [ http://www.regenechsen.de/regex_en/regex_4_en.html ] that did it! Super! I owe you a Weizen! LOL, thanks a lot. Bavaria? ;-)) From your other mail: Well, if it works on your side, but not on mine, maybe there are some funny characters in the text, which I can't see, or something like that. Let's put it to rest and wait until it comes up again ;-) You may forward such a mail and I test it again :-) Thanks for your patience! You're welcome :-) -- Best regards, Gerd === Tutorial for using regular expressions with TheBat! www.regenechsen.de You would like to meet interesting people using TheBat!? No problem, come to Burg Lohra :-)) TheBat!-User-Meeting 2003 http://www.thebat-by.nowicka.de Current version is 1.62 | Using TBUDL information: http://www.silverstones.com/thebat/TBUDLInfo.html
Re: Automaticly replying to a received message?
Hello Daniel Grunberg ! On Mon, 27 Jan 2003 14:11:33 -0500 GMT your local time, which was 27.01.2003, 20:11 (GMT+0100) where I live, you (Daniel Grunberg) wrote in [EMAIL PROTECTED]:">mid:[EMAIL PROTECTED]: Is there a way I can automatically Reply To all messages that meet the filter's requirements? Have a look into the sorting office, incoming mail, tab Actions, Send AutoReply Is it what you were looking for? -- Best regards, Gerd === Tutorial for using regular expressions with TheBat! www.regenechsen.de --- Givierge enunciated the doctrine that must be impressed on ciphers: Encode well or do not encode at all. In transmitting cleartext, you give only a piece of information to the enemy, and you know what it is; in encoding badly, you permit him to read all your correspondence and that of your friends Yardley The American Black Chamber in David Kahn The Codebreakers, p. 349 --- now playing: WDR2 :-) Current version is 1.62 | Using TBUDL information: http://www.silverstones.com/thebat/TBUDLInfo.html
Re: Automaticly forwarding a received message?
Hello Daniel Grunberg ! On Mon, 27 Jan 2003 14:06:56 -0500 GMT your local time, which was 27.01.2003, 20:06 (GMT+0100) where I live, you (Daniel Grunberg) wrote in [EMAIL PROTECTED]:">mid:[EMAIL PROTECTED]: Is there a way I can automatically forward to two email addresses copies of all messages that meet the filter's requirements? LOL, and again: sorting office, incoming filters, Tab Actions, Forward to Just add the email addresses you need :-) -- Best regards, Gerd === Tutorial for using regular expressions with TheBat! www.regenechsen.de --- Man kann feststellen, ob Windows auf einem PC läuft, ohne ihn einzuschalten Man sieht nach, ob die Schrift der Reset-Taste noch lesbar ist... --- now playing: WDR2 :-) Current version is 1.62 | Using TBUDL information: http://www.silverstones.com/thebat/TBUDLInfo.html
Re: Automatically insert text from an external file?
Hello Mark Partous ! On Sun, 19 Jan 2003 14:04:36 +0100 GMT your local time, which was 19.01.2003, 14:04 (GMT+0100) where I live, you (Mark Partous) wrote in [EMAIL PROTECTED]:">mid:[EMAIL PROTECTED]: I thought I had read a message in which someone wrote about automatically inserting text from an external, predefined text-file. Use %PUT=PATH_AND_FILENAME_TO_EXTERNAL_FILE in a Quick-Tenmplate. This might help. I have searched the messages I still have, as well as on-line in the TBUDL-archive and I do not find it anymore. I suppose it was done with a REGEX. Hmmm, if you want to extract part of the text in the external file, then you can do this with a regex. But this is not necessary if you only want to include the contents of a file. Have I been dreaming? Don't think so ;-)) -- Best regards, Gerd === Tutorial for using regular expressions with TheBat! www.regenechsen.de --- The scientist is a lover of truth for the very love of truth itself, wherever it may lead. Luther Burbank, American horticulturist (1849-1926) --- now playing: WDR2 :-) Current version is 1.62 | Using TBUDL information: http://www.silverstones.com/thebat/TBUDLInfo.html
Re: My TB can now manually re-thread messages :)
Hello Miguel A. Urech ! On Sun, 19 Jan 2003 19:25:24 +0100 GMT your local time, which was 19.01.2003, 19:25 (GMT+0100) where I live, you (Miguel Urech) wrote in [EMAIL PROTECTED]:">mid:[EMAIL PROTECTED]: Now, please don't send PM (private mail) about this. If you are interested in this option, please show it here. *show* :- Me, I'm interested. And, if there is enough interest and the moderators don't think it is OT, I will give as much detail as needed here. (Sorry, I'm not on TBOT). Could you say more about it? Either here or in TBTECH? -- Best regards, Gerd === Tutorial for using regular expressions with TheBat! www.regenechsen.de --- You cannot run with the hare and hunt with the hounds. --- now playing: WDR2 :-) Current version is 1.62 | Using TBUDL information: http://www.silverstones.com/thebat/TBUDLInfo.html
Re: Bat Running Slow
Hello Michael Disabato ! On Fri, 17 Jan 2003 06:24:27 -0600 GMT your local time, which was 17.01.2003, 13:24 (GMT+0100) where I live, you (Michael Disabato) wrote in [EMAIL PROTECTED]:">mid:[EMAIL PROTECTED]: Trend Micro PC-Cillian 2003 and there were no attachments. And it's the entire program running slow as well. It took several minutes to open this reply. Did you enable Virus-Check by accident without having a plugin? Options, Virus checking, Check incoming mail This was an error a friend had with TB, which didn't download any mail, slowed down the system etc. All because he de-installed the virus plugin (AV-something) but didn't disabled that option I'm running 1.52 on Win2K. TF No, you are running 1.62 Christmas Edition. ;-) Just call me fat fingers. :) LOL :-))) -- Best regards, Gerd === Tutorial for using regular expressions with TheBat! www.regenechsen.de --- The one who says it cannot be done should never interrupt the one who is doing it. --- now playing: WDR2 :-) Current version is 1.62 | Using TBUDL information: http://www.silverstones.com/thebat/TBUDLInfo.html
Re: counting the chars in the subject...
Hello Heiko Kuschel ! On Tue, 14 Jan 2003 12:08:06 +0100 GMT your local time, which was 14.01.2003, 12:08 (GMT+0100) where I live, you (Heiko Kuschel) wrote in [EMAIL PROTECTED]:">mid:[EMAIL PROTECTED]: Maybe there's a way to count the chars in the subject and put the result in the body of the mail? Just asking, maybe someone has got an idea... KArin, who is not member of TBUDL, asked me to forward the following info concerning your problem: 8 Hi Heiko, Maybe there's a way to count the chars in the subject and put the result in the body of the mail? of course there is a way: you need 2 Quicktemplates, I call them sms and sms1 - sms: %COMMENT=%SUBJ %ORG=0%- %QINCLUDE=sms1%- - sms1: %CLEAR%- %IF:%SETPATTREGEXP='(?is).(.*)'%REGEXPMATCH='%COMMENT':%- %COMMENT='%SETPATTREGEXP=(?is).(.*)%REGEXPMATCH=%COMMENT'%- %ORG='%CALC=_%ORG+1_'%- %QINCLUDE='sms1':%ORG='%CALC=_%ORG+1_'%- %COMMENT='%SETPATTREGEXP=(?is).(.*)%REGEXPMATCH=%COMMENT'%- Number of Chars in Subject: %ORG%- - write your text into the subject field, type sms into the text field and press |strg|spacebar| The number of chars in the subject field will appear, and you'll see it in the field organization in the mail header as well. HTH! KArin mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 8 -- Best regards, Gerd === Tutorial for using regular expressions with TheBat! www.regenechsen.de --- Any technology distinguishable from magic is sufficiently advanced Arthur C Clarke --- now playing: WDR2 :-) Current version is 1.62 | Using TBUDL information: http://www.silverstones.com/thebat/TBUDLInfo.html
Re: TB and simple MAPI
Hello Feli Wilcke ! On Tue, 7 Jan 2003 17:24:39 +0100 GMT your local time, which was 07.01.2003, 17:24 (GMT+0100) where I live, you (Feli Wilcke) wrote in [EMAIL PROTECTED]:">mid:[EMAIL PROTECTED]: [...] you could copy the desktop shortcut to the start menu. But this will not solve the mailto: problem. What about removing the password from TB? I'm not sure whether I am up-to-date, but AFAIR TB always prompted for a password even if you don't have one; you only had to press Enter... But this might be an outdated info from times when TB had release number starting with 1.4x... :-/ -- Best regards, Gerd === Tutorial for using regular expressions with TheBat! www.regenechsen.de --- now playing: WDR2 :-) Current version is 1.62 | Using TBUDL information: http://www.silverstones.com/thebat/TBUDLInfo.html
Re: ticket system
Hello Oliver Antosch ! On Mon, 16 Dec 2002 14:07:42 + GMT your local time, which was 16.12.2002, 15:07 (GMT+0100) where I live, you (Oliver Antosch) wrote in [EMAIL PROTECTED]:">mid:[EMAIL PROTECTED]: I there some kind of plugin for message threading so I have some kind of ticket support system? Although I'm not sure what you mean with ticket support but did you try: View, View Threads by ? -- Best regards, Gerd === Tutorial for using regular expressions with TheBat! www.regenechsen.de --- If it weren't for the last minute, nothing would ever get done. --- now playing: WDR2 :-) Current version is 1.62 | Using TBUDL information: http://www.silverstones.com/thebat/TBUDLInfo.html
Re: Parking the whole thread at once
Hello Marcus Ohlström ! On Thu, 12 Dec 2002 11:26:27 +0100 GMT your local time, which was 12.12.2002, 11:26 (GMT+0100) where I live, you (Marcus Ohlström) wrote in [EMAIL PROTECTED]:">mid:[EMAIL PROTECTED]: The shortcut editor is your friend (found under View | Edit shortcuts). Look for Message List Pop-Up | Thread | Park. Or mark the whole thread (if you have threaded view activated), right mouse click, Thread, Park -- Best regards, Gerd === Tutorial for using regular expressions with TheBat! www.regenechsen.de --- Man kann feststellen, ob Windows auf einem PC läuft, ohne ihn einzuschalten Man sieht nach, ob die Schrift der Reset-Taste noch lesbar ist... --- now playing: WDR2 :-) Current version is 1.61 | Using TBUDL information: http://www.silverstones.com/thebat/TBUDLInfo.html
[regex-tutorial]: Part 5
parts of the text not the whole text itself. So we still need a macro that allows us to tell the macro which of the subpatterns are to be used. And this is %SUBPATT=n. 'n' denotes the n-th subpattern in the regex. Now this combination will be quite difficult to read and understand. So I will explain it using an example and will generate the whole macro combination bit by bit. After that I will combine everything. From the original date of a mail we want to extract the year, two digits only, and use it as quoted text. The date is provided by %ODATE. The regex is \d{2}(\d{2})\b. That means we want to extract only two digits if they are preceded by two digits and followed a word boundary. Thus the first macro is: %SETPATTREGEXP=\d{2}(\d{2})\b. The text that is used to find the date is defined using the macro %REGEXPBLINDMATCH=%ODATE. We are looking for the first subpattern, so %SUBPATT=1. Now we put all together, we don't forget to use the alternate '-characters: %QUOTES=%SETPATTREGEXP='\d{2}(\d{2})\b'%- %REGEXPBLINDMATCH='%ODATE'%SUBPATT='1' [Note: the regex is split using the %- macro and can be entered as two lines!] Another example? There is a regex for reply templates that modifies the name of the recipient. Instead of 'Gerd Ewald' we would like to have 'Gerd Ewald at TBUDL ..' Well, we could download this regex somewhere, but let us try to create it ourselves. %OFROMNAME will give us the name. The reply address is given by %OREPLYADDR. We will extract the list's name with a regex. Usually the name of the list precedes the @-character: %SETPATTREGEXP=(.*?)\@ This is used in combination with %REGEXPBLINDMATCH=%OREPLYADDR of which we only want subpattern one : %SUBPATT=1 The result is then the contents of the TO-field. Watch out, before you can enter text this field has to be cleared. This is done by an initial assignment which is void. %TO=%TO='%OFROMNAME at %- %SETPATTREGEXP=_(.*?)\@_%- %REGEXPBLINDMATCH=_%OREPLYADDR-%- %SUBPATT=_1_ %OREPLYADDR' [Note 1: the regex is split using the %- macro and can be entered as seen!] [Note 2: the regex makes use of a feature of recent versions of TB where any character may be used as a quoting delimiter, in this case the underscore and single quote as well as double quote. Users of earlier versions will have to resort to using the clumsier double delimiter syntax] The original reply address has to be added enclosed in -characters at the end. As you can see, the syntax is quite easy and stereotypical. The only difficult thing is to find out which macro provides the necessary information and how to extract it with the regex. Here another example that is available at Marck's FAQ-page (www.silverstones.com) %WRAPPED='Historians believe that on %ODATE%- %SETPATTREGEXP=(?m-s)Date\:\s*?((.*?[\d]{4})\s*?([\d]{0,2}\:%- [\d]{0,2}\:[\d]{0,2})\s*?(.*))%- %REGEXPBLINDMATCH=%HEADERS , at %SUBPATT=3[GMT%SUBPATT=4]%- (which was %OTIME where I live) you wrote:'%- Here, once again, the %- macro is used to make the whole combination easier to read. This has no special meaning except that it tells TB that the following line should be treated as a continuation of the first line. The %WRAPPED means that the result of the macro combination will be word wrapped at the defined column in TB. What does the macro do? The first part %WRAPPED='Historians believe that on %ODATE%- is just some kind of a link up: on every reply the date of the original mail should be added to the text 'Historians believe that on '. The second part contains the regex that is much more interesting to us (I deleted the %- macro to show the regex in one line): (?m-s)Date\:\s*?((.*?[\d]{4})\s*?([\d]{0,2}\:[\d]{0,2}\:[\d]{0,2})\s*?(.*)) The option multiline is switched on and DotAll is switched off: (?m-s) Then the regex looks for 'Date:', which may be followed by any number of whitespaces. Due to the greediness of the star a question mark follows. The author escaped the colon with a backslash that isn't necessary. I don't know why he did that but it won't cause problems, so we'll leave it alone. Now the first parenthesis follows. There is no need to group this part and I assume it is done for easier reading. You may delete it but then bear in mind that the total number of subpatterns has changed. The second parenthesis looks for anything that consists of four digits. We know that the regex will look in the kludges (%HEADERS) for the date. So we guess that the author will look for something like 'year'. This may be followed by whitespaces. Now we come to the third parenthesis. This is the one the author needs. He searches for three numbers with zero, one or two digits. These numbers are separated with colons. That is obviously the time. Whitespace may follow and with the fourth subpattern all of the rest is matched: this is nomore than the GMT-information. A closer look on the regex shows that it is applied to the header lines and only that only subpattern three and four are really needed
Re: Suggestion (RegEx Tester)
Hello Marcus Ohlström ! On Sun, 14 Jul 2002 14:10:53 +0200 GMT your local time, which was 14.07.2002, 14:10 (GMT+0200) where I live, you wrote: I could find no links to a 'regex tester', but found the one (searching google) that gets integrated with the Bat's help dialog I missinterpreted this, I thought Tack had found a regex tester integrated somewhere in the help file you get if you hit F1. I couldn't find this myself and therefore asked my question. Well, Dirk's regex tester does exactly this as long as you do not use the HTML-version. If you hit F1 you get an additional tab panel I have followed Gerd's regex tutorial carefully (which I'm sure Gerd could verify), it's not that I'm not - as you state - in earnest about reading the tutorial. Verified!! :-))) I finished the last part, but I can't get it copied from my laptop :-( Keep fingers crossed ;-)) -- Best regards, Gerd === Tutorial PGP and TB! and How to Use Regular Expressions in TB! at www.pro-privacy.de --- An expert is someone who knows some of the worst mistakes that can be made in his subject and how to avoid them. (Werner Heisenberg) --- now playing: WDR2 :-) Current Ver: 1.61 FAQ: http://faq.thebat.dutaint.com Unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Archives : http://tbudl.thebat.dutaint.com Moderators : mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] TBTech List: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Bug Reports: https://www.ritlabs.com/bt/
Re: Suggestion (RegEx Tester)
Hello Tack ! On Sun, 14 Jul 2002 08:01:03 +0100 GMT your local time, which was 14.07.2002, 09:01 (GMT+0200) where I live, you wrote: In 'The Bat FAQ/Regular expression tutorial', several references are made to a 'regex tester'. I could find no links to a 'regex tester', but found the one (searching google) that gets integrated with the Bat's help dialog. I think this could be better documented? Hmmm, if you mean the tutorial, there was a documentation. ,-- [ Tutorial ] | You have to download a DLL written by Dirk Heiser | | (http://www.Dirk-Heiser.de/RegExTest/RegExTest_V0.3beta.zip) | | and copy it into your TB-directory. Then, when you open the TB-help, | you will find a tabfolder called RegEx. Or, if you are using the | CHM-Version of the help (this probably applies only to the German | version), you can use this DLL by creating a link on your desktop | which opens the DLL: | | %windir%\system32\rundll32.exe your_pathregextest.dll, Run '-- But I think you mean that this is not documented in TB itself. Well, the regex tester is a private program and not an official feature of Ritlabs. Maybe Dirk might find some interest to offer it Ritlabs. Have a nice weekend -- Best regards, Gerd === Tutorial PGP and TB! and How to Use Regular Expressions in TB! at www.pro-privacy.de --- Money may be the husk of many things, but not the kernel. It buys you food, but not appetite; medicine, but not health; acquaintances, but not friends; servants, but not loyalty; days of joy, but not peace or happiness. Henrik Ibsen --- now playing: WDR2 :-) Current Ver: 1.60q FAQ: http://faq.thebat.dutaint.com Unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Archives : http://tbudl.thebat.dutaint.com Moderators : mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] TBTech List: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Bug Reports: https://www.ritlabs.com/bt/
Re: [regex-tutorial]: Part 4
Hello Januk Aggarwal ! On Wed, 19 Jun 2002 22:12:52 -0700 GMT your local time, which was 20.06.2002, 07:12 (GMT+0200) where I live, you wrote: Cool, I just tested this and TB seems to finally support back references. This should make accurate regexps a little easier. I wonder when this was fixed? Hmmm, don't ask me, but when I wrote the German version in March it already worked fine. -- Best regards, Gerd === Tutorial PGP and TB! and How to Use Regular Expressions in TB! at www.pro-privacy.de --- Program: the conversion of input into error messages. --- now playing: WDR2 :-) Current Ver: 1.60q FAQ: http://faq.thebat.dutaint.com Unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Archives : http://tbudl.thebat.dutaint.com Moderators : mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] TBTech List: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Bug Reports: https://www.ritlabs.com/bt/
[regex-tutorial]: Part 3
Hi everyone, this is the third part, which was the most difficult to translate. Ask Marck, without him it wouldn't be like that. Thank you again, Marck :-) There are some very long regular expressions in this part. They might be wrapped due to layout reasons. Sorry for that! The fourth part will be delayed because I won't be at home for a week and no chance to work on part 4. So, sorry for that, but you have to be patient. Anyway, I think part 3 is quite difficult and you will need some time to work through. Good luck. ===Start 5. Special Elements - Part 1 Everything we've had so far hasn't been too difficult. But this chapter is heavy stuff. Please, do me a favour: read this chapter carefully. Be patient! Try everything with the regex tester; get familiar with the elements in this chapter: they are the essential for creating proper regex. Although this may be a bit more complicated than the chapters before, it is certainly more interesting ;-) 5.1 Quantifier We already know to define patterns for matching single characters, groups of characters, character classes or ranges of characters. We can use alternatives in our search patterns. But something of absolutely vital interest is missing - the ability to define repetitions. You remember the example that was a regex to search for the European formatted date: \d\d\.\d\d\.\d\d\d\d For every single digit we wrote \d. Isn't there another way, much simpler than repeating the metacharacter as often as the regex wants to find the character? Yes, there is! There are quantifiers! + * ? are the most important quantifiers. The +-character means that the character preceding the plus-sign has to appear at least once at the specific point of the string. fo+l matches 'fool', 'fol' and 'fol'. Re:\s+, for example, means that at least one whitespace has to follow 'Re:' to be matched. I hear some of you experts: yes, the usage of quantifiers is not only restricted to characters. You can use them to repeat metacharacters, character classes and some other elements we are yet to learn. ;-) The star * represents any number of occurrences of the preceding character at the specific point in the string. 'Any' really means 'any', even if the character doesn't appear at all. Ooops, what's the use of that? Well, let's have a look at the following example: Re:\s*\w+ Huh, that already looks as cryptic as those regex the experts use g. What does this regex mean? Search for a 'Re' followed by a colon. Then any number of whitespace characters may appear - even no spaces at all. What for? In proper subject lines there should be a space. But imagine we would like to match any subject string even if someone modified it manually and deleted the space. We have to tell the regex that there might or might not be a space. Anyway, both possibilities should be found. This can be done with the star as quantifier. Well, finally, there has to be at least one alphanumeric character. Caution: the meaning of this quantifier is sometimes misinterpreted. Look at the following task: a regex has to be defined that matches only lines of a string with only digits in it. One solution I saw was: ^[0-9]*$ But this regex matches void lines as well; the star stands for 'no digit' as well as for 'any digit'. So the regex machine returns TRUE when no digit is in a line. If you want to make sure that there is at least one digit in a line you have to use the plus-sign: ^[0-9]+$. The question mark means that the preceding character may appear once or not at all at the specific point of the string. A bit like the star only that the number of occurrence has the maximum '1'. h..?s matches 'hers', 'hips' and 'his' or 'has'. Within 'house' it matches 'hous'; within 'hose' it matches 'hos'. There is another way to define repetitions: {x,y} This is a way to explicitly define how many repetitions of the preceding characters you want. In this formula 'x' denotes the minimum number and 'y' the maximum number necessary for the preceding character. \d{2,4} means that only two to four digits in a row are matched. If you omit the second number 'y' but leave the comma in the curly brackets {x,}, then there is no upper limit and the minimum is x-times the preceding character. \w{3,} matches any string with at least three word-characters. If you omit not only the second number but the comma as well {x}, then this means the exact number of appearances of the preceding character. \d{6} matches exactly six digits. This quantifier gives us a new way to write our regex that matches European formatted dates : \d{2}\.\d{2}\.\d{4} The three quantifiers I introduced at the beginning of this chapter are simply special ways to write one of the following regex: {0,1} = ? {1,} = + {0,} = * Before I can tell you more about quantifiers and what has to be kept in mind when using them, I have to introduce parentheses (round brackets) as a grouping device. 5.2 Grouping of Elements, Subpattern and Quantifiers
[regex-tutorial]: Part 2
Hi Batsmen, this is the second part of the regex tutorial. This time we will learn something about special meta characters which anchor the search pattern like line and word boundaries. Furthermore you will be able to use alternatives in search patterns. The third part is in preparation. To let you know what comes next in *Part 3*: it will explain quantifiers, groups, subpatterns. But let's start with part 2 which will be online soon at http://www.silverstones.com/thebat/Regex.html and www.pro-privacy.de = 4. Complex Patterns Ok, that was an easy start! But it wasn't very interesting, was it? But if simple search patterns were all that Regular Expressions offer, it wouldn't be worth a tutorial. So, there has to be more! Okay, let's get going with the more complicated stuff: 4.1 Line Boundaries Instead of having a regex look for text anywhere in the string we can force it to search in specific parts of the string. These anchored patterns have their own metacharacters: ^ and $ The circumflex ^ means that the search pattern is anchored to the start of the line; the dollar $ means that the regex will look for the pattern at the end of a line (Yes, dear experts, for now, let's take a string as one line. Ok?) Example: ^give or take This pattern will only be matched if 'give' is at the beginning of a line and is followed by 'or take'. Or: This is the end$ is only matched if it appears at the end of the line. It doesn't matter what comes first: 'This is the end' has to be the end of the line! You can use these two metacharacters to speed up the regex. I admit, it is not all that important when you use regex in TB! because you won't be working with large amounts of data. But on the other hand: it can't hurt anyone ;-) Why does the regex work faster if you use the circumflex or the dollar, you ask? Ok, let's use our example regex ^give or take on the string 'Once upon a time': the regex machine checks whether the first thing it finds is the beginning of the line. This returns TRUE. Next it checks the following character whether it is a 'g'. The search process is cancelled at once because this returns FALSE! Now what would have happened without the circumflex? The regex machine would have checked the second, third, fourth etc. character to match the search pattern, only to find out that the search pattern doesn't exist in that string. The longer the string, the more time the regex machine takes to fail ;-) 4.2 Word Boundaries But there is more that regexian offers. Word boundaries! Some people forget about this because they think there is another way to define word boundaries. Believe me, there is, but it's nowhere near as easy as this! \b makes the regex searching for the pattern at word boundaries: \bgive or take. Hey, we know this one, don't we? That is our first example again! The pattern that was found in 'You have to forgive or take the consequences!' but now won't be found thanks to the word boundary metacharacter. I remember a discussion in one of the German TB-lists where someone asked why this metacharacter is necessary, because a word could be recognized by surrounding spaces. This is not a good idea: words could end at question marks, exclamation marks, a full stop A regex like ain would indeed match 'Again a good idea' but wouldn't find 'Oh no, not again.' You can avoid that when you use \b instead. Of course, this metacharacter can be negated, as can the others: \B which means that the regex should match characters everywhere in a string other than at word boundaries. Another example should explain this: Re\B. The regex has to match the characters 'Re' as long as they are not a word boundary, followed by any other character (the dot). Now, we have the string: 'Re: or Reply:'. Try it in the regex tester. What happens? The result is 'Rep'. Replace \B by \b and the regex matches 'Re:'. Everything clear now? 4.3 Alternatives You remember the first example in this tutorial give or take? When I introduced it I made the redundant remark that this regex wouldn't match 'give' OR 'take'. Well, this remark wasn't really redundant: I needed something to start this chapter, some kind of transition bg. Because this is the chapter that explains how we can use the OR; how alternative patterns are defined. To search for alternative patterns, regexian offers a special metacharacter: it is the vertical bar or may be better known as pipe-symbol |. So, what would have been necessary to search for 'give' or 'take'? give|take. The regex checks whether it matches 'give'. If not it checks the string for 'take'. What happens if the string contains both alternatives? Well, to be honest, when I started with regex I was convinced that the first alternative in the regular expression would be matched. But no! The regex will match the alternative that comes first in the string! Let's get into details with an example: Given the regex this|the|that and the string 'the hand that signed
Re: Regex
Hello Adam ! On Tue, 14 May 2002 16:32:37 -0400 (EDT) GMT your local time, which was 14.05.2002, 22:32 (GMT+0200) where I live, you wrote: [...] If I do this, some of the messages found under Message Finder do not contain my word at all. Odd, don't you think? Hmmm, I tried, as you told me, to look for count with F7 and Regex ON. And yes I found some, that do not have the word at all: not in text and not in the kludges. Even a test message like 'bladibla' that I sent to myself matched. Total match in that folder: 187 Next step was to search for \bcount\b and Regex on. That was ok. Total match in that folder: 45 Well, Adam and I thought that this is a bit strange... But I think the regex question was answered?! -- Best regards, Gerd === Tutorial PGP and TB! and How to Use Regular Expressions in TB! at www.pro-privacy.de --- You know you've landed gear-up when it takes full power to taxi. --- now playing: WDR2 :-) Current Ver: 1.60k FAQ: http://faq.thebat.dutaint.com Unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Archives : http://tbudl.thebat.dutaint.com Moderators : mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] TBTech List: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Bug Reports: https://bt.ritlabs.com
Re: Îòâåò: ms exchange server + theba t
Hello Dierk Haasis ! On Wed, 15 May 2002 18:31:15 +0200 GMT your local time, which was 15.05.2002, 18:31 (GMT+0200) where I live, you wrote: I can't find in outlook 97 where the parameters under MS Exchange Server where this parameters can be found and used in the bat Please do something about your OE sending out HTML. Looks like MS Exchange or Outlook Exchange :-/ @smexport IIRC there is an option in the properties of every address to NOT send RTF-formatted mail. This is what should avoid HTML-mails -- Best regards, Gerd === Tutorial PGP and TB! and How to Use Regular Expressions in TB! at www.pro-privacy.de --- Erwerbsregel #21R Stelle niemals Gewinn über Freundschaft. --- now playing: WDR2 :-) Current Ver: 1.60k FAQ: http://faq.thebat.dutaint.com Unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Archives : http://tbudl.thebat.dutaint.com Moderators : mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] TBTech List: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Bug Reports: https://bt.ritlabs.com
Re: Auto-responding
Hello Pete Milne ! On Tue, 14 May 2002 10:13:58 -0600 GMT your local time, which was 14.05.2002, 18:13 (GMT+0200) where I live, you wrote: I cant seem to find much about creating an 'auto-reponder' message. Could someone fill me in a little please? Account, Filters Set up an incoming filter for those msgs you want to reply by auto-respond. Goto tabfolder Actions and tick the checkbox Send auto-reply. Hope that was the easiest way for that! -- Best regards, Gerd === Tutorial PGP and TB! and How to Use Regular Expressions in TB! at www.pro-privacy.de --- In a Copenhagen airline ticket office: We take your bags and send them in all directions. --- Current Ver: 1.60k FAQ: http://faq.thebat.dutaint.com Unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Archives : http://tbudl.thebat.dutaint.com Moderators : mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] TBTech List: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Bug Reports: https://bt.ritlabs.com
Re: Regex
Hello Adam ! On Tue, 14 May 2002 15:15:31 -0400 (EDT) GMT your local time, which was 14.05.2002, 21:15 (GMT+0200) where I live, you wrote: If you wanted to match 'count' but not 'counting', how would you do that? You mean 'count' as a word of its own? Ok, this will be explained next part. Anyway, I can tell you that there are metacharacters indicating a word boundary (\b). So, although this is to early: \bcount\b is _one_ possibility. -- Best regards, Gerd === Tutorial PGP and TB! and How to Use Regular Expressions in TB! at www.pro-privacy.de --- Necessity is the plea for every infringement of human freedom. It is the argument of tyrants; it is the creed of slaves. (William Pitt, British Prime Minister, November 18, 1783) --- now playing: Mussorgsky - Eine Nacht auf dem Kahlen Berge Current Ver: 1.60k FAQ: http://faq.thebat.dutaint.com Unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Archives : http://tbudl.thebat.dutaint.com Moderators : mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] TBTech List: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Bug Reports: https://bt.ritlabs.com
Re: Regex
Hello David Elliott ! On Tue, 14 May 2002 19:39:16 +0100 GMT your local time, which was 14.05.2002, 20:39 (GMT+0200) where I live, you wrote: LS0tLS1CRUdJTiBQR1AgU0lHTkVEIE1FU1NBR0UtLS0tLQ0KSGFzaDogU0hBMQ0KDQpTYWx1dGF0 What do you mean? -- Best regards, Gerd === Tutorial PGP and TB! and How to Use Regular Expressions in TB! at www.pro-privacy.de --- O mortal man that lives by bread, What makes thy nose so red, That silly fool that look so pale, Tis drinking Sally Birkett's ale. (Aufschrift auf einer Tafel eines engl. Pubs) --- now playing: WDR2 :-) Current Ver: 1.60k FAQ: http://faq.thebat.dutaint.com Unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Archives : http://tbudl.thebat.dutaint.com Moderators : mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] TBTech List: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Bug Reports: https://bt.ritlabs.com
[regex-tutorial]: Part 1
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 Hi Bats(wo)men, some days ago Daniel Grunberg asked for an English version of a tutorial on regular expressions (TBTECH, mid:[EMAIL PROTECTED]) which I published on www.pro-privacy.de for the German beginners list. First thing I did was a mail to Marck to find out whether there is some interest in a translation. Well, here it is. At least the first part. Marck checked the text and transformed it into something you can read. Thank you, Marck! (My translation was something between the following text and a translation altavista did, hehe). The whole tutorial will be subdivided in five parts. It will take some time to prepare the next part, so you have to wait one or two weeks for the next part to be published. Sorry! Anyway, we decided to publish it in parts, so you can start learning regexian and you have a chance to ask questions for better understanding. Any part is posted to TBUDL using a special subject ([regex tutorial]) so that those of you who don't want to read it may define a filter to kill the mail. Please use the same prefix in your subject for any reply. The tutorial is published on www.pro-privacy.de (look there for special) and on Marck's official FAQ at http://www.silverstones.com/thebat/FAQ.html Ok, that's it. Let's start. I hope you will enjoy the tutorial :-) START OF PART 1 == 1. Introduction Whenever I came across something interesting in a mail that was created with TheBat! like cleaned Subject-strings or automagically deleted PGP-lines, I would ask in one of the mailing lists: How did you do that?. Quite often I would receive a reply like You will need a regex for that! And sometimes the result was something like: %QUOTES=%SETPATTREGEXP=(?is)(-BEGIN PGP SIGNED.*?\n(Hash:.*?\n)?\s*)?(.*?)(^(- --|--\n|-BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE)|\z)%REGEXPBLINDMATCH=%text%SUBPATT=3 This is only a simple example of those cryptic looking combinations of TB!-Macros and regular expressions which are simply called regex by the TB-experts. To me it seemed a random sequence of characters; as if a cat walked across my keyboard. Awkward, arbitrary and cryptic, that at least was my impression until Januk Aggarwal (special thanks to him) gave me a short introduction to regex at TBTECH and my workmate Alfred Rübartsch gave me a copy of Jeffrey Friedls excellent book Mastering Regular Expressions. Although I entered the fascinating world of Regular Expression with the help of these two, I am still not an expert in the regexian language. Anyway, as an advanced beginner, I have dared to write this tutorial to hopefully explain some things and give a good start in Regular Expressions to other beginners. This tutorial is meant to bring you into closer contact with the regex topic. Well, let's see how it works; let's see whether we will be able to explain the regex-example above by the time we come to the end of this tutorial. 2. Regular Expressions 2.1. What does Regular Expression mean? Regex are not only used in TB! You can find them in quite a lot of different UNIX-tools (e.g. grep), in some programming languages like PERL (Practical Extraction and Report Language, sometimes called 'Pathologically Eclectic Rubbish Lister' bg) and even my editor UltraEdit uses them. Laura Lemay wrote in her book PERL in 21 days that the term Regular Expression makes no sense at first sight (to be honest: even at second sight it still makes no sense to me), because these are not real expressions and furthermore no one really can explain why they are regular! Well, let's ignore this; let's simply accept that the term Regular Expression has its origin in formal algebra and that they are indeed part of Mathematics. The easiest and most convenient way to define Regular Expression is to say: They are search patterns to match characters in strings. Those of you who have tried to find files using the DOS command line or the search function in the Explorer may have used patterns like: dir *.doc copy *.??t c:\temp These examples show patterns that consist of letters, stars, question marks and other characters to define which files should be listed or copied. In the first example only files that have the suffix doc should be listed. In the second example only files that have a three-letter suffix and a t as last character in the suffix should be copied. But these regex are merely wildcards! In no way as mighty as Regular Expressions. One can't compare them to real regex, which offer much more than wildcards for characters. 3. Simple Patterns To explain some regular expressions and to understand the examples given in this tutorial we have to define how the regex will appear. I will envelope the regular expression in quotation marks (). If you want to test the regex you will have to copy the part between the -characters. Testing regular expressions? Yes, sure, this is possible. You have to download a DLL written by Dirk Heiser
Re: EWxternal program
Hello Gerard de Vries ! On Wed, 13 Feb 2002 23:50:43 +0100 GMT your local time, which was 13.02.2002, 23:50 (GMT+0100) where I live, you wrote: [...] Who knows which program this is and were to download= SORRY: I didn't look it up properly. The URL was wrong it should have been http://www.guenther-eisele.de/bat/index.htm and sorry there is no translation, You have to read it in German...:-/ -- Best regards, Gerd == Using The Bat! Version 1.53t PGP/GPG-Keys on request mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=send_key Tutorial for using PGP with TheBat! www.pro-privacy.de Leg' Dich mit Hundehaltern an und Du kannst Dein Amt begraben. Konrad Adenauer Gerd is listening to: The Dave Brubeck Quartet - Everybody's jumpin' -- Archives : http://tbudl.thebat.dutaint.com Moderators : mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] TBTech List: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Latest Vers: 1.53d FAQ: http://faq.thebat.dutaint.com
Re: EWxternal program
Hello Gerard de Vries ! On Wed, 13 Feb 2002 23:50:43 +0100 GMT your local time, which was 13.02.2002, 23:50 (GMT+0100) where I live, you wrote: A while ago someone mentioned a program that could be used to cut bits of text from emails, specially at the bottom. It would be started through a filter as an external program. It was written by a German person, specially for use with TB! I can't find it anywhere in the archive. Who knows which program this is and were to download= Do you mean cut.exe? Explained at http://www.guenther-eisele.de/bat/faq.htm There is AFAIK an English translation avaiable. -- Best regards, Gerd == Using The Bat! Version 1.53t PGP/GPG-Keys on request mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=send_key Tutorial for using PGP with TheBat! www.pro-privacy.de Erwerbsregel #85 Lass nie die Konkurrenz wissen, was Du denkst. Gerd is listening to: The Dave Brubeck Quartet - Three to get ready -- Archives : http://tbudl.thebat.dutaint.com Moderators : mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] TBTech List: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Latest Vers: 1.53d FAQ: http://faq.thebat.dutaint.com
Re: PGP Decrypt observation
Hello Hanspeter Schaffner ! On Sat, 26 Jan 2002 09:42:17 +0100 GMT your local time, which was 26.01.2002, 09:42 (GMT+0100) where I live, you wrote: [...] This does no more appear since I did upgrade from V. 6.5.8 to 6.5.8ckt version. Does anyone know why or is this normal? I can't confirm that. I use the ckt version for quite a long time and any decrypted message does have (PGP decrypted). Hmmm, do you mean that you don't have this addition when you reply on a decrypted message? If so, you might be using a quick template which cleans the subject? -- Best regards, Gerd == Using The Bat! Version 1.53t PGP/GPG-Keys on request mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=send_key Tutorial for using PGP with TheBat! www.pro-privacy.de OK guys, let me down. I was only kidding. -Jesus, on the cross. -- Archives : http://tbudl.thebat.dutaint.com Moderators : mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] TBTech List: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Latest Vers: 1.53d FAQ: http://faq.thebat.dutaint.com
Re: PGP Decrypt observation
Hello Carren Stuart ! On Sat, 26 Jan 2002 12:45:21 +1300 GMT your local time, which was 26.01.2002, 00:45 (GMT+0100) where I live, you wrote: [...] the plugin to me is no quicker and no more convenient that using the tray or hotkeys function. As usual: that depends. I for example prefer to keep the decrypted version of a message, because all my TB-Info is on a encrypted partition (E4M, but you can use scramdisk or PGPdisk as well). Advantage is, that I only need one passphrase to have access to all decrypted versions and I can use the F7-search feature of TB. But with TB we can realize almost every individual user environment, can't we? ;-) Still, I think the plugin's action in this matter is far from ideal and not at all in keeping with a security function. I am no expert but why can't the unencrypted messages be read in a seperate viewer as they are when using PGP tray or GnuPG? Surely it can't be too difficult for the experts to get it to do that rather than to drop a copy in the folder. Again, that depends. As I like to keep a decrypted message in my boxes it would be more clicks to me than the way it is realised now. But I agree: there could be an option in the using of the plugin: PGPTray-/GPG-like view (secure viewer) or TB-standard view. -- Best regards, Gerd == Using The Bat! Version 1.53t PGP/GPG-Keys on request mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=send_key Tutorial for using PGP with TheBat! www.pro-privacy.de Intaxication: Euphoria at getting a tax refund, which lasts until you realize it was your money to start with. -- Archives : http://tbudl.thebat.dutaint.com Moderators : mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] TBTech List: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Latest Vers: 1.53d FAQ: http://faq.thebat.dutaint.com
Re: PGP Decrypt observation
Hello Geordon VanTassle ! On Fri, 25 Jan 2002 08:48:16 -0600 GMT your local time, which was 25.01.2002, 15:48 (GMT+0100) where I live, you wrote: [...] Then, I went back to the folder that the cyphertext was sitting in and saw a bunch of copies of the clear-text mail right there. Apparently, The Bat! dumps a new message, in clear, to the location from which it was decrypted. Interesting! Is there somewhere in the HELP that this behavior is documented? AFAIK this is the normal behaviour of TB. The subject of the decrypted version has an addition: (PGP Decrypted) -- Best regards, Gerd == Using The Bat! Version 1.53t PGP/GPG-Keys on request mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=send_key Tutorial for using PGP with TheBat! www.pro-privacy.de He who praises everybody praises nobody. -- Archives : http://tbudl.thebat.dutaint.com Moderators : mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] TBTech List: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Latest Vers: 1.53d FAQ: http://faq.thebat.dutaint.com
Re: GMX Servers Still Prefixing Sentences with ??
Hello Nick Andriash ! On Wed, 23 Jan 2002 11:57:23 -0800 GMT your local time, which was 23.01.2002, 20:57 (GMT+0100) where I live, you wrote: [...] As you can see, the prefix was added by the GMX Servers. Your address is *.gmx.co.uk while mine is *.gmx.net so perhaps that's the difference if you don't see the same things I'm seeing. shrug I just couldn't believe and tried it here with a gmx.de. So I did as you said: original* from a from b From c From d ** *Received message from a from b From c From d * Seems to work with the German Server! -- Best regards, Gerd == Using The Bat! Version 1.53t PGP/GPG-Keys on request mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=send_key Tutorial for using PGP with TheBat! www.pro-privacy.de Necessity is the plea for every infringement of human freedom. It is the argument of tyrants; it is the creed of slaves. (William Pitt, British Prime Minister, November 18, 1783) -- Archives : http://tbudl.thebat.dutaint.com Moderators : mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] TBTech List: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Latest Vers: 1.53d FAQ: http://faq.thebat.dutaint.com
Re: GMX Servers Still Prefixing Sentences with ??
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 Hello Nick Andriash ! On Wed, 23 Jan 2002 11:50:30 -0800 GMT your local time, which was 23.01.2002, 20:50 (GMT+0100) where I live, you wrote: I'm not explaining it properly, but it's something along those lines. Send yourself a test message, and make sure that one of the sentences in your test message _begins_ with from... not capitalised. On second thought, include a couple of sentences with one beginning with From and see if there is a difference. When I sent my last message with all these from's in the first row, I PGP-signed the message and was surprised. something changed: from a from b - From c - From d If there is a dash-space in front of the From, then this was added by PGP! Or is it something else what has to do with TB? - -- Best regards, Gerd == Using The Bat! Version 1.53t PGP/GPG-Keys on request mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=send_key Tutorial for using PGP with TheBat! www.pro-privacy.de - A conclusion is the place where you got tired of thinking. Arthur Block -BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE- Version: PGP 6.5.8 ckt Comment: Key-ID: 0x0FB66C7D or 0xD56C6187 iQA/AwUBPE8kBky/sHrVbGGHEQKJ3QCeO5VqfdzcH5f120oX78iWazhPSMYAoMYf Okhp2p3/skU0N/+ijeaxQFL+ =IXgU -END PGP SIGNATURE- -- Archives : http://tbudl.thebat.dutaint.com Moderators : mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] TBTech List: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Latest Vers: 1.53d FAQ: http://faq.thebat.dutaint.com
Re: scanning incoming/outgoing emails
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 Hello Jan Rifkinson ! On Sat, 19 Jan 2002 15:38:55 -0500 GMT your local time, which was 19.01.2002, 21:38 (GMT+0100) where I live, you wrote: [...] Would it be possible for someone to follow up to see what arrangement(s) might be made between Trend Micro the RITLab developers of The Bat! Hurray, Jan. Thank you! Why didn't I have this idea? I now forwarded your mail to the German support as well to show that this is not a single user idea! - -- Best regards, Gerd == Using The Bat! Version 1.53t PGP/GPG-Keys on request mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=send_key Tutorial for using PGP with TheBat! www.pro-privacy.de - Smart is when you believe only half of what you hear. Brilliant is when you know which half to believe. Orben's Current Comedy -BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE- Version: GnuPG v1.0.6 (MingW32) - GPGshell v2.20 Comment: Digitally signed for authentication Comment: Key-ID 0xD56C6187 or 0x0FB66C7D iD8DBQE8SqJ7TL+wetVsYYcRAjwGAKDdEU4znXRyGtjA7P4G4d+bVzZLLQCgiukX eSglcL1Az77QkBk5HMOiPLk= =+lGX -END PGP SIGNATURE- -- Archives : http://tbudl.thebat.dutaint.com Moderators : mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] TBTech List: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Latest Vers: 1.53d FAQ: http://faq.thebat.dutaint.com
Re: Traffic Congestion
Hello GJim ! On Thu, 17 Jan 2002 17:35:47 -0700 GMT your local time, which was 18.01.2002, 01:35 (GMT+0100) where I live, you wrote: [...] This will probably sound like a complaint, but I'm just wondering if it is normal to see this much message traffic on this list. If you need to reduce your message base for whatever reason: click on folder properties, activate Keep messages in the base (for days), enter a number of days you like and activate both possibilities in the small box at the bottom of that window called On Exit. TB will remove messages which are older than the number of days you entered. If you want to keep a message for a longer period you have to park them. I'm learning a lot - still don't understand how to do PGP - Hmmm, have a look at www.pro-privacy.de click on PGP and TheBat! - Step by Step May be this helps a bit? -- Best regards, Gerd == Using The Bat! Version 1.53t PGP/GPG-Keys on request mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=send_key Tutorial for using PGP with TheBat! www.pro-privacy.de It's not true that nice guys finish last. Nice guys are winners before the game even starts. Addison Walker -- Archives : http://tbudl.thebat.dutaint.com Moderators : mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] TBTech List: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Latest Vers: 1.53d FAQ: http://faq.thebat.dutaint.com
Re: guide on bat regex
Hello Thomas! On Wed, 16 Jan 2002 11:31:04 +0800 GMT your local time, which was 16.01.2002, 04:31 (GMT+0100) where I live, you wrote: [...] But I warn you: it's difficult. You'll end up looking for perl tutorials on the internet (google will find dozens), and you if you understand it any better than me, you have a chance of getting an early PhD in maths. ;-) Thomas: you are joking: he won't get an early PhD. ;-) But you are right: in the end you start programming Perl, hehehe. Nicholas, if you want to learn more about Regular Expressions, I recommend Jeffrey Friedel, Mastering Regular Expressions, O'Reilly. But some of the Perl books give a good description in the chapter called Pattern Matching. -- Best regards, Gerd == Using The Bat! Version 1.53t PGP/GPG-Keys on request mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=send_key Teamwork is essential, it gives them someone else to shoot at. -- Archives : http://tbudl.thebat.dutaint.com Moderators : mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] TBTech List: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Latest Vers: 1.53d FAQ: http://faq.thebat.dutaint.com
Re: guide on bat regex
Hello Gerd Ewald ! On Wed, 16 Jan 2002 17:48:44 +0100 GMT your local time, which was 16.01.2002, 17:48 (GMT+0100) where I live, you wrote: [...] Nicholas, if you want to learn more about Regular Expressions, I recommend Jeffrey Friedel, Mastering Regular Expressions, O'Reilly. But some of the Perl books give a good description in the chapter called Pattern Matching. Ooops, here are two I have bookmarked: http://www.devshed.com/Server_Side/Administration/RegExp/page1.html http://www.perl.com/pub/a/2000/11/begperl3.html Forgot to include them in my last mail: sorry! -- Best regards, Gerd == Using The Bat! Version 1.53t PGP/GPG-Keys on request mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=send_key Erwerbsregel #18 Ein Ferengi ohne Profit ist überhaupt kein Ferengi. -- Archives : http://tbudl.thebat.dutaint.com Moderators : mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] TBTech List: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Latest Vers: 1.53d FAQ: http://faq.thebat.dutaint.com
Re: OpenPGP vs. S/MIME: Preferences?
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 Hello Nicholas ! On Wed, 16 Jan 2002 19:39:35 -0500 GMT your local time, which was 17.01.2002, 01:39 (GMT+0100) where I live, you wrote: [...] must know how did you setup that PGP e-mail thing it is cool. Although your PGP-installation seems to work I would like to recommend a tutorial on PGP and TheBat which was written for the German users and is now available in English on www.pro-privacy.de Maybe this gives some more information ;-) - -- Best regards, Gerd == Using The Bat! Version 1.53t PGP/GPG-Keys on request mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=send_key Tutorial for using PGP with TheBat! www.pro-privacy.de - There are three kinds of lies: lies, damned lies and statistics. (Benjamin Disraeli) -BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE- Version: PGP 6.5.8 ckt Comment: Key-ID: 0x0FB66C7D or 0xD56C6187 iQA/AwUBPEZZHEy/sHrVbGGHEQLWrgCeMy4ZqVRvLLUyuYwf+PuRT7FI6JYAoJtq salerXDqxOsP5Ry80nCFIIz+ =jp6P -END PGP SIGNATURE- -- Archives : http://tbudl.thebat.dutaint.com Moderators : mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] TBTech List: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Latest Vers: 1.53d FAQ: http://faq.thebat.dutaint.com
Re: SMTP question
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 Hello Peter Meyns ! On Sat, 5 Jan 2002 18:01:41 +0100 GMT your local time, which was 05.01.2002, 18:01 (GMT+0100) where I live, you wrote: [...] Warning: there were no compatible authentication mechanisms detected. Does it mean, that this particular ISP doesn't check SMTP authentication? Or what else could it be? No, Peter, the ISP may check authentication, but not with that protocoll you checked in TB. As far as I understood the whole thing, your SMTP-Transport setting is not compatible with that the ISP uses. E.g.: you have checked RFC 2554 authentication and this is not supported by your ISP. - -- Best regards, Gerd == Using The Bat! Version 1.53t PGP/GPG-Keys on request mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=send_key - It is now proved beyond doubt that smoking is one of leading causes of statistics. Fletcher Knebel -BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE- Version: GnuPG v1.0.6 (MingW32) - GPGshell v2.20 Comment: Digitally signed for authentication Comment: Key-ID 0xD56C6187 or 0x0FB66C7D iD8DBQE8NzJjTL+wetVsYYcRAgAkAJ47c58vZNB1eYFosi1STW/mLvsR2QCeMmnC nsVTJDyCQUv2AG7Y4DPHktI= =PKha -END PGP SIGNATURE- -- Archives : http://tbudl.thebat.dutaint.com Moderators : mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] TBTech List: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Latest Vers: 1.53d FAQ: http://faq.thebat.dutaint.com
Re: Secure Connection (SSL) with TB
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 Hello Thomas F ! On Sat, 5 Jan 2002 10:49:11 +0800 GMT your local time, which was 05.01.2002, 03:49 (GMT+0100) where I live, you wrote: [...] GE Sorry for being so late, but I had visitors and was busy all the time! I must think about whether I can accept your apology or not. ;-) on my kneesOh, please, Thomas!! The visitor was involved in the choco-deal ;-) /on my knees - -- Best regards, Gerd == Using The Bat! Version 1.53t PGP/GPG-Keys on request mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=send_key - Erwerbsregel #73 Zähle immer Dein Wechselgeld. -BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE- Version: GnuPG v1.0.6 (MingW32) - GPGshell v2.20 Comment: Digitally signed for authentication Comment: Key-ID 0xD56C6187 or 0x0FB66C7D iD8DBQE8NzTgTL+wetVsYYcRAudkAJ901v37VU81phfjRHnUdlPW2WKNeACg3Nhy DI0wgBFncXXmRnzSkcPlsGQ= =SKXs -END PGP SIGNATURE- -- Archives : http://tbudl.thebat.dutaint.com Moderators : mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] TBTech List: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Latest Vers: 1.53d FAQ: http://faq.thebat.dutaint.com
Re: Secure Connection (SSL) with TB
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 Hello Thomas! On Fri, 28 Dec 2001 11:14:29 +0800 GMT your local time, which was 28.12.2001, 04:14 (GMT+0100) where I live, you wrote: [...] GE A) Does anybody knows how to do this with TB? Still not from within TB, even though the wish is not that new. For now, you have a to use a third-party application such as stunnel (www.stunnel.org) Thank you very much, Thomas. D/loaded at once. I will make my way through the instructions. :-) Sorry for being so late, but I had visitors and was busy all the time! - -- Best regards, Gerd == Using The Bat! Version 1.53t PGP/GPG-Keys on request mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=send_key - Random numbers should not be generated with a method chosen at random. (Donald Knuth, The Art of Computer Programming Volume 2 Seminumerical Algorthms) -BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE- Version: GnuPG v1.0.6 (MingW32) - GPGshell v2.10 Comment: Digitally signed for authentication Comment: Key-ID 0xD56C6187 or 0x0FB66C7D iD8DBQE8NdJWTL+wetVsYYcRAqL7AKDdxFS3rXYndUEsRl7ZkTZcsyDXEgCfV1BB RMpTCrSdlt8kxY7UW+KDeYU= =x2pW -END PGP SIGNATURE- -- Archives : http://tbudl.thebat.dutaint.com Moderators : mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] TBTech List: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Latest Vers: 1.53d FAQ: http://faq.thebat.dutaint.com
Secure Connection (SSL) with TB
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 Hi Batsmen, one of my mail-accounts requires a secure connection before any authentication can take place. The postmaster informed me that TLS via STARTTLS-command, RFC 2487 Jan 1999 is used. To use SMTP on that server an SSL/TSL-support of TheBat is necessary. A) Does anybody knows how to do this with TB? B) Is this the wrong group? Should it be TBTECH? If so, please reply there! THX. - -- Best regards, Gerd == Using The Bat! Version 1.53t PGP/GPG-Keys on request mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=send_key - Always do right. This will gratify some people and astonish the rest. Mark Twain -BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE- Version: GnuPG v1.0.6 (MingW32) - GPGshell v2.10 Comment: Digitally signed for authentication Comment: Key-ID 0xD56C6187 or 0x0FB66C7D iD8DBQE8K2gGTL+wetVsYYcRAlWhAJ9XCY1t/1dQLKuxiQhTQjVl+H8atACggPrw 82pKGPox3VKIrY6/DQz/I3w= =vr1/ -END PGP SIGNATURE- -- Archives : http://tbudl.thebat.dutaint.com Moderators : mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] TBTech List: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Latest Vers: 1.53d FAQ: http://faq.thebat.dutaint.com
Re: Puzzling characters?
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 Hello Joe! Nice to read you again! On Sun, 23 Dec 2001 14:57:20 -0800 GMT your local time, which was 23.12.2001, 23:57 (GMT+0100) where I live, you wrote: I receive another mail list (The Wall Street Journal) that's sending me bulletins that contain the following puzzling characters (e.g., èä¿¿ìä¿¿h). As you can see, they normally fall at the end of normal paragraphs. It happens in every message. Can anyone explain to me what might be going on here? No, not really. But I receive these kind of letters in some mail which was created on MacOS-systems with Outlook which was written for Mac-PC's. Maybe this gives you a clue?! Merry Christmas! And: don't drink and surfe! ;-) Hahaha!! (I will restrict myself to drink!!) - -- Best regards, Gerd == Using The Bat! Version 1.53t PGP/GPG-Keys on request mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=send_key - The one who says it cannot be done should never interrupt the one who is doing it. -BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE- Version: PGP 6.5.8 ckt Comment: Key-ID: 0x0FB66C7D or 0xD56C6187 iQA/AwUBPCbyon70/g0Ptmx9EQKeiQCfVmBVu+eUp5//l5xLUFfhS4vsaxcAoLZq DqdYeFMtFDVlWBEO1LoJyZAZ =lApD -END PGP SIGNATURE- -- Archives : http://tbudl.thebat.dutaint.com Moderators : mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] TBTech List: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Latest Vers: 1.53d FAQ: http://faq.thebat.dutaint.com
Re: [SOT] Filters, partial strings
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 Hello Peter Palmreuther ! On Mon, 10 Dec 2001 00:50:31 +0100 GMT your local time, which was 10.12.2001, 00:50 (GMT+0100) where I live, you wrote: [...] '123.456.789.698' as you have no chance to validate the number is between 0 255 (including), but it's quite sure better than nothing :-) Why not using [012][0-5][0-5] if it is always a three-digit number (else you have to use alternatives...) Sorry, I know this should be posted in TBTech. Mea culpa. - -- Best regards, Gerd == Using The Bat! Version 1.53t PGP/GPG-Keys on request mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=send_key - Breeding rabbits is a hare raising experience. -BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE- Version: PGP 6.5.8 ckt Comment: Key-ID: 0x0FB66C7D or 0xD56C6187 iQA/AwUBPBXG90y/sHrVbGGHEQIMeQCfaaVKeDX/gL8hM0pPGVYBcyf53f0An3sn B9RxWltEeWNyWzbHiI/cukB8 =bSI6 -END PGP SIGNATURE- -- Archives : http://tbudl.thebat.dutaint.com Moderators : mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] TBTech List: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Latest Vers: 1.53d FAQ: http://faq.thebat.dutaint.com
Re: [SOT] Filters, partial strings
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 Hello Januk Aggarwal ! On Tue, 11 Dec 2001 02:08:22 -0800 GMT your local time, which was 11.12.2001, 11:08 (GMT+0100) where I live, you wrote: [...] That regular expression won't catch all three digit numbers between 0 and 255, it will catch all numbers from: 000-055, 100-155, 200-255 Aaarrrgghh, you are right. Seems as if I'm still in bed ;-) I should test my ideas before. You're missing ranges. One that might work better is: (\d|\d\d|[01]\d\d|2[0-5][0-5])\D When I wrote mine I remembered a regex which was printed in *Friedel*, but was too lazy to look it up. Here it is: ([01]?\d\d?|2[0-4]\d|25[0-5])\.([01]?\d\d?|2[0-4]\d|25[0-5])\.([01]?\d\d?|2[0-4]\d|25[0-5])\.([01]?\d\d?|2[0-4]\d|25[0-5]) Still 0.0.0.0 is possible, but this another story. - -- Best regards, Gerd == Using The Bat! Version 1.53t PGP/GPG-Keys on request mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=send_key - I cried because I had no sex life. Then I met a man with no hands. -BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE- Version: PGP 6.5.8 ckt Comment: Key-ID: 0x0FB66C7D or 0xD56C6187 iQA/AwUBPBXOkky/sHrVbGGHEQLDFgCcDh51lkxPU5oGFJCwGtMXwHXpEYkAn2G1 OT9KSlrXaahQE+L/CPTO/yMl =/IN2 -END PGP SIGNATURE- -- Archives : http://tbudl.thebat.dutaint.com Moderators : mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] TBTech List: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Latest Vers: 1.53d FAQ: http://faq.thebat.dutaint.com
Re: Filters, partial strings
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 Hello Peter Palmreuther ! On Tue, 11 Dec 2001 10:50:48 +0100 GMT your local time, which was 11.12.2001, 10:50 (GMT+0100) where I live, you wrote: [...] GE Why not using [012][0-5][0-5] if it is always a three-digit number GE (else you have to use alternatives...) The downside is: Joseph did not write about this always being a 3-digit number at last position and so I assumed 'normal' IP criteria. And an IP address is described as 4 blocks of numbers, divided by a period, each block able to contain a decimal value between 0 255. So you _can_ write 1.2.3.004 but you are not enforced to. Right. And even worse: mine was wrong as I forgot some possiblke numbers as Januk wrote. Sorry! I now quoted a regex for IP's out of Friedels book in my reply to Januk. GE Sorry, I know this should be posted in TBTech. Mea culpa. NIMHO. It's an answer to a users question about his filters and not a deeper technical discussion about basics or something similar :-) Thinking your way nearly everything in this list would have to end up in TBTECH after the 2nd reply *ggg* bg Right again. Nevertheless, my reply was related to the regex only (and it is again). So, that's why I apologized in advance ;-) - -- Best regards, Gerd == Using The Bat! Version 1.53t PGP/GPG-Keys on request mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=send_key - There is a certain relief in change, even though it may be from bad to worse. Washington Irving (1783-1859) US Writer -BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE- Version: PGP 6.5.8 ckt Comment: Key-ID: 0x0FB66C7D or 0xD56C6187 iQA/AwUBPBXPSky/sHrVbGGHEQJBlACgv13IUoCvcts8xmhkOBIDZyAitJoAoLQj jaCRxmvgcO9473l2AlDrjo2Q =rj6l -END PGP SIGNATURE- -- Archives : http://tbudl.thebat.dutaint.com Moderators : mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] TBTech List: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Latest Vers: 1.53d FAQ: http://faq.thebat.dutaint.com
Re: OpenPGP problems, can't import/create keys.
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 Hello Marck D Pearlstone ! On Tue, 11 Dec 2001 21:08:19 + GMT your local time, which was 11.12.2001, 22:08 (GMT+0100) where I live, you wrote: OC I thought the idea was you didn't need any additional software OC when using that? That will only work with RSA keys and, since most people use the more sophisticated DH/DSS keys, you will need additional software. Oscar, it is less work than you think to install PGP 6.5.8 and the PGP-DLL of TB. And after that TB will work with PGP as if it were a part of it (Hmmm, actually, with the DLL it is a part, isn't it?). - -- Best regards, Gerd == Using The Bat! Version 1.53t PGP/GPG-Keys on request mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=send_key - Erwerbsregel #60 Achte darauf, dass sich Deine Lügen nicht widersprechen. -BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE- Version: PGP 6.5.8 ckt Comment: Key-ID: 0x0FB66C7D or 0xD56C6187 iQA/AwUBPBZwCUy/sHrVbGGHEQKPKwCaAnMsgSuy682rDbHOB8km349T78MAoKzv OUfQyA0TImvqWS6eXXFUsV9A =z/ER -END PGP SIGNATURE- -- Archives : http://tbudl.thebat.dutaint.com Moderators : mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] TBTech List: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Latest Vers: 1.53d FAQ: http://faq.thebat.dutaint.com
Re: my first bat bug!..
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 Hello Januk Aggarwal ! On Wed, 28 Nov 2001 13:06:41 -0800 GMT your local time, which was 28.11.2001, 22:06 (GMT+0100) where I live, you wrote: [...] After all, by selecting text, you're *telling* TB what you want quoted. It doesn't matter if there are signature delimiters, you've explicitly selected what you want quoted. Yep, exactly, that is the way I do it. I never select any signature delimiters. - -- Best regards, Gerd == Using The Bat! Version 1.53t PGP/GPG-Keys on request mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=send_key - There are three kinds of lies: lies, damned lies and statistics. (Benjamin Disraeli) -BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE- Version: GnuPG v1.0.6 (MingW32) - GPGshell v2.10 Comment: Digitally signed, Key-ID 0xD56C6187 Comment: Still GnuPGshell iD8DBQE8BlMufvT+DQ+2bH0RAswNAKC12rN2YjvlpqGhb76weoK2mtJ1IACeNaXF bDfGHKvDWmvEgyDhaSgcBdc= =SOQ/ -END PGP SIGNATURE- -- Archives : http://tbudl.thebat.dutaint.com Moderators : mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] TBTech List: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Latest Vers: 1.53d FAQ: http://faq.thebat.dutaint.com
Re: PGP, round 3: Solution found !
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 Hello Joseph N. ! On Wed, 28 Nov 2001 16:38:25 -0600 GMT your local time, which was 28.11.2001, 23:38 (GMT+0100) where I live, you wrote: [...] The PGP plug-in signs first and then encrypts, so the message appears to be only encrypted, but inside the encryption is the signature. (I think) Thanks anyway for your time. To be honest: if you select Encrypt and Sign, the signature is implemented in the encryption. This kind of signature is slightly different -in technical terms- from the clearsign-procedure. You can check it out by just using PGP to produce a detached signature: this one too, looks different to clear signed documents. So never mind: obviously it is working ;-) - -- Best regards, Gerd == Using The Bat! Version 1.53t PGP/GPG-Keys on request mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=send_key - Quis Custodiet Ipsos Custodes ? (Who will watch the watchmen ?) (Juvenal, circa 128 AD) -BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE- Version: GnuPG v1.0.6 (MingW32) - GPGshell v2.10 Comment: Digitally signed for authentication purposes Comment: Key-ID 0xD56C6187 or 0x0FB66C7D iD8DBQE8BlT8fvT+DQ+2bH0RAvXNAKDbHnbfVlvPUxw8Mrh2FQGk2OyoKgCgjtF/ viX8rqA2ivp7LZumwh4Ci5w= =OoYA -END PGP SIGNATURE- -- Archives : http://tbudl.thebat.dutaint.com Moderators : mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] TBTech List: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Latest Vers: 1.53d FAQ: http://faq.thebat.dutaint.com
Re: my first bat bug!..
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 Hello Peter Palmreuther ! On Wed, 28 Nov 2001 09:22:41 +0100 GMT your local time, which was 28.11.2001, 09:22 (GMT+0100) where I live, you wrote: [...] Yes. First: selecting the whole text and pressing Ctrl+F4 inserts the whole text as quote here, but that may be due to I'm using the current Beta. Second: Select the text to reply on. Copy it. Reply to the mail with F4. If the text below the signature delimiter is still cut off delete the reply and use Alt+Insert to insert the copied text as quote, this works. May I add a third possibility: Mark the text you want to reply to in the preview pane (or in the editor) and press F4: TB will use the highlighted part for your reply. I usually reply this way and I don't have any probs with PGP-delimiters (I just do not highlight them for reply ;-)) HTH - -- Best regards, Gerd == Using The Bat! Version 1.53t PGP/GPG-Keys on request mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=send_key - Erwerbsregel #25 Angst macht einen guten Geschäftspartner. -BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE- Version: PGP 6.5.8 ckt Comment: Key-ID: 0x0FB66C7D or 0xD56C6187 iQA/AwUBPAUPvky/sHrVbGGHEQIgzQCfTWAyK9sJdOPshDs/sCK3Ka311N8AoI58 8UVwHOGryMxu30JxLDiY4vz7 =8Gd6 -END PGP SIGNATURE- -- Archives : http://tbudl.thebat.dutaint.com Moderators : mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] TBTech List: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Latest Vers: 1.53d FAQ: http://faq.thebat.dutaint.com
Re: New Member in ML
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 Hello Eddie Castelli ! On Mon, 12 Nov 2001 17:36:33 +0100 GMT your local time, which was 12.11.2001, 17:36 (GMT+0100) where I live, you wrote: Thank you dieter. It seem 'almos' whole Germany is present here hihi No, Eddie, only those who like to work with TB in a more friendly atmosphere :-)) - -- Best regards, Gerd == Using The Bat! Version 1.53t PGP/GPG-Keys on request mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=send_key - Die Gier ist der Vater des Irrtums. (unbekannt) -BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE- Version: PGP 6.5.8 ckt Comment: Key-ID: 0x0FB66C7D or 0xD56C6187 iQA/AwUBO/BDOX70/g0Ptmx9EQKpdQCfccfsB50Ti+Xok2KIf5Ux9cqDFQ8AoK6Y Ly6mP6jKXIOzs5Gx7GrC3dsg =w9LP -END PGP SIGNATURE- -- Archives : http://tbudl.thebat.dutaint.com Moderators : mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] TBTech List: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Latest Vers: 1.53d FAQ: http://faq.thebat.dutaint.com
Re: Remove something in the subject line
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 Salut Cyril! On Mon, 24 Sep 2001 15:23:24 +0200 GMT your local time, which was 24.09.2001, 15:23 (GMT+0200) where I live, you wrote: [...] I tried but didn't understand that well. I miss explainations on syntaxes in the Help-file. If you mean the syntax of Regex I suggest Friedl, Regular Expressions, O'Reilly which is not only a good start for Regex but for Perl as well. If you mean the syntax of using regexes in TB (all this stuff with Subpattern and so on) there is a really good explanation in the German helpfile, just in case you can read German. If by chance you can't, there is a chance to look for examples in the archives. Try to find out what they do and just ask in the TBTech group for help if you don't understand (Help, dear moderators: it was the TBTech for special Regex-questions, wasn't it?) - -- À bientôt, Gerd == Using The Bat! Version 1.53o PGP/GPG-Keys on request mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=send_key - A witty saying proves nothing - Voltaire -BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE- Version: PGP 6.5.8 ckt Comment: Key-ID: 0x0FB66C7D or 0xD56C6187 iQA/AwUBO6+c/Uy/sHrVbGGHEQKR8wCg2SFpTZ8P0fmDxUM7uBEZBF8HGvAAnjyL lVp0G8ADju+R8pd8P42QTVCz =VcY3 -END PGP SIGNATURE- -- Archives : http://tbudl.thebat.dutaint.com Moderators : mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] TBTech List: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Latest Vers: 1.53d
Re: Sound for mailincoming
Hello Peter Meyns ! On Sun, 23 Sep 2001 21:39:08 +0200 GMT your local time, which was 23.09.2001, 21:39 (GMT+0200) where I live, you wrote: SK i know its possible to play a sound for an incoming mail. It seems, SK thats a global setting. Is it possible to set a sound for each dir? Yes, Stefan, it is. Go to Folder -- Properties -- Sound and choose from your files. You even can add the sound for one of the filters for incoming *or* outgoing mail. See tab folder Actions in filter. -- Best regards, Gerd == Using The Bat! Version 1.53o PGP/GPG-Keys on request mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=send_key Some people can stay longer in an hour than others can in a week. William Dean Howells (1837-1920) US Author -- Archives : http://tbudl.thebat.dutaint.com Moderators : mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] TBTech List: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Latest Vers: 1.53d
Re: Beni Ara!
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 Hello Jan Rifkinson ! On Sat, 22 Sep 2001 07:55:10 -0400 GMT your local time, which was 22.09.2001, 13:55 (GMT+0200) where I live, you wrote: guess I know I could filter on a word, sender, subject but since I don't know what it is, I thought someone might give me an idea that makes sense otherwise I'm punching @ a cloud. Of late I H, is it possible to filter on characters which are uncommon to English like those in the mail you forwarded or like ßäöü. I'm not sure whether this is a good idea because you might receive foreign mail which you don't want to be deleted/filtered. - -- Best regards, Gerd == Using The Bat! Version 1.53o PGP/GPG-Keys on request mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=send_key - Nobody will ever win the battle of the sexes. There's too much fraternizing with the enemy. Henry Kissinger -BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE- Version: PGP 6.5.8 ckt Comment: Key-ID: 0x0FB66C7D or 0xD56C6187 iQA/AwUBO6yK80y/sHrVbGGHEQLoxgCg6RLRmU6CeQh50Jrg5Vn8Ed41IH8AoNac bHpwO4qYW9CV25p3ib8REq65 =IIJA -END PGP SIGNATURE- -- Archives : http://tbudl.thebat.dutaint.com Moderators : mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] TBTech List: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Latest Vers: 1.53d
Re: PGP question regarding encrypting messages
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 Hello Silviu Cojocaru ! On Sat, 12 May 2001 09:56:22 +0300 GMT your local time, which was 12.05.2001, 08:56 (GMT+0200) where I live, you wrote: It seems that in order for me to encrypt the messages I send to someone, with PGP, I need his/her public key, is this true ? Yes, you encrypt the message to someones public key and sign it with your secret key. And in order for that someone to read the encrypted message I sent to him/her, that user must have *my* public key right ? No, the recipients needs his/her secret key to decrypt the message and your public key to verify the signature. - -- Best regards, Gerd == Using The Bat! Version 1.52e PGP/GPG-Keys on request mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=send_key - Der Wusch ein Tier zu halten, entspricht meist dem uralten Grundmotiv - nämlich der Sehnsucht des Kulturmenschen nach dem verlorenen Paradies. (Konrad Lorenz) -BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE- Version: GnuPG v1.0.5 (MingW32) - GnuPGshell v1.75 Comment: Digitally signed! So you know it's me!! Key 0xD56C6187 Comment: Watch out! Highly beta!! !!Biohazard!! iD8DBQE6/Os7fvT+DQ+2bH0RAjtfAKCoedR93TrEFOJPItQuAhohMmBSPQCeLo+L WxkyKs/jngJSomfItlbiEt8= =XgPy -END PGP SIGNATURE- -- __ Archives : http://tbudl.thebat.dutaint.com Moderators : mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] TBTech List: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] You are subscribed as : archive@jab.org
Re: PGP question regarding encrypting messages
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 Hello Thomas ! On Sat, 12 May 2001 16:38:41 +0800 GMT your local time, which was 12.05.2001, 10:38 (GMT+0200) where I live, you wrote: And in order for that someone to read the encrypted message I sent to him/her, that user must have *my* public key right ? GE No, the recipients needs his/her secret key to decrypt the message and GE your public key to verify the signature. You mean: _Yes_, the recipient needs the sender's public key to decrypt the message, right? ;-) Maybe I misunderstood the question at all. I try to begin from the very start: A sends a message to B. A uses the public key of B (pKb) to encrypt the message and his secret key to sign it (sKa). Now B has to use her secret key (sKb) to decrypt the message and the public key of A to verify the signature (pKa). Even if B doews not have the senders public key, in our example pKa, she would be able to decrypt the message. She wouldn't be able to verify the signature but she could reveal the plaintext message from the ciphertext. I assume you are Thomas, who speaks German?? If so, go to www.pro-privacy.de, Inhaltsverzeichnis, Schlüsselerzeugung and click on the first RSA. We tried to give a practical examole of the algorithms RSA, Diffie-Hellmann and ElGamal. Did I get your question right?? - -- Best regards, Gerd == Using The Bat! Version 1.52e PGP/GPG-Keys on request mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=send_key - People who never get carried away should be. Malcolm S. Forbes, American publisher. -BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE- Version: GnuPG v1.0.5 (MingW32) - GnuPGshell v1.75 Comment: Digitally signed! So you know it's me!! Key 0xD56C6187 Comment: Watch out! Highly beta!! !!Biohazard!! iD8DBQE6/PxxfvT+DQ+2bH0RAh1RAJ9tEHbJ0ULn1F4rJ5Ykl/9D5Sy2RwCg8B0v Yl/9lM8HYYZu4dRgAR5TD4I= =/pOg -END PGP SIGNATURE- -- __ Archives : http://tbudl.thebat.dutaint.com Moderators : mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] TBTech List: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] You are subscribed as : archive@jab.org
Re: TB and OpenPGP
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 Hello Silviu Cojocaru ! On Sat, 12 May 2001 15:55:51 +0300 GMT your local time, which was 12.05.2001, 14:55 (GMT+0200) where I live, you wrote: I imported the public key of a friend of mine into the key manager but I cant set the validity level... Whenever I try to check the signature of his mail it turns out invalid and there's a grey dot in the Validity column. What is going on ? The validity is set by signing the key with your secret key. But this means you have verified the authenticity of the public key by comparing the fingerprint with your friend. Once you are sure that the received key belongs to the person who pretends to be the key owner and you have verified that the key wasn't changed on its way through the web you may sign it. But please, don't do this without your friends permission and do not upload the key to the server: instead send it back to your friend, signed exportable. And remember: others might rely on your signature. - -- Best regards, Gerd == Using The Bat! Version 1.52e PGP/GPG-Keys on request mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=send_key - Man kann auch ohne Hund leben, aber es lohnt sich nicht! Heinz Rühmann -BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE- Version: GnuPG v1.0.5 (MingW32) - GnuPGshell v1.75 Comment: It's me!! Key-ID 0xD56C6187 Comment: Caution, beta version, extremely biohazardous stuff. iD8DBQE6/ThvTL+wetVsYYcRAl6DAKDudU89y51o0hqJBxK+MjLOiZmQNACcDqbU Igr4y4wORYMvpAa2ie6hWJk= =/aQ3 -END PGP SIGNATURE- -- __ Archives : http://tbudl.thebat.dutaint.com Moderators : mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] TBTech List: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] You are subscribed as : archive@jab.org
Re: Warning! First worm that hits TB! too...
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 Hello Leo Zelevinsky ! On Tue, 1 May 2001 10:36:52 -0400 GMT your local time, which was 01.05.2001, 16:36 (GMT+0200) where I live, you wrote: I now installed 6.5.8ckt and I get for your message a pencil with an x, signer: unknown, keyID=0xE10774CE, Key ID: Invalid Key. Where does it say that this is a good key? Or would it look different for a bad key? Unknown means that PGP does not know the key because it is not in your keyring. You have to download the key: Start PGPkeys, click on the Magnifying Glass icon, select key-ID in top down menu and type in 0xE10774CE. PGPkeys will look for the key on the server. After that the PGPLog should show the proper information! - -- Best regards, Gerd == Using The Bat! Version 1.52 Beta/12 PGP/GPG-Keys on request mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=send_key - We are continually faced with a series of great opportunities brilliantly disguised as insoluble problems. John W. Gardner -BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE- Version: GnuPG v1.0.5 (MingW32) - GnuPGshell v1.73 Comment: Digitally signed! So you know it's me!! Key_ID 0xD56C61 iD8DBQE67svTTL+wetVsYYcRAsAnAJ94fzKvrsPmMzAhzZw0Lv9izI7KigCg3/67 zBRtZcf43PT9b2JKt4536Ac= =t9he -END PGP SIGNATURE- -- __ Archives : http://tbudl.thebat.dutaint.com Moderators : mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] TBTech List: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] You are subscribed as : archive@jab.org
Re: OT - Text Editor recommendation?
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 Hello Marck D. Pearlstone ! On Mon, 30 Apr 2001 15:21:28 +0100 GMT your local time, which was 30.04.2001, 16:21 (GMT+0200) where I live, you wrote: [...] I use TextPad myself. www.textpad.com. Others speak highly of NoteTab Pro and UltraEdit, which I don't have URLs for. www.ultraedit.com or www.idmcomp.com They all have macros, multiple file editing and syntax highlighting for common languages like HTML, XML, C, C++ PERL, HTML, .Yep! And integrated HTML-Tidy... - -- Best regards, Gerd == Using The Bat! Version 1.52 Beta/12 PGP/GPG-Keys on request mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=send_key - Murphy's Gesetz: Alles Gute im Leben ist entweder ungesetzlich, unmoralisch, oder es macht dick. -BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE- Version: PGP 6.5.8 ckt Comment: Digitally signed for authentication! iQA/AwUBOu2JAUy/sHrVbGGHEQKm5gCeLg56ZqX3te2oBZSP50uqmRJj2pIAnRhf D7x5/6b8HDY3f4HZJq924oO5 =xVkZ -END PGP SIGNATURE- -- __ Archives : http://tbudl.thebat.dutaint.com Moderators : mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] TBTech List: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] You are subscribed as : archive@jab.org
Re: vCards
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 Hello Gerry Doyon ! On Thu, 26 Apr 2001 14:43:15 -0400 GMT your local time, which was 26.04.2001, 20:43 (GMT+0200) where I live, you wrote: Am I missing something? I want to be able to send my vCard along with my e-mails. Is the only way to do this through a macro and templates? Utilities, Attach vCard?? Is it what you are looking for? - -- Best regards, Gerd == Using The Bat! Version 1.52 Beta/11 PGP/GPG-Keys on request mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=send_key - We are what we pretend to be. Kurt Vonnegut, Jr. -BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE- Version: GnuPG v1.0.4-1 (MingW32) Comment: Digitally signed! So you know it's me!! Key_ID 0xD56C61 iD8DBQE66HdRTL+wetVsYYcRAhb6AKC6htuIpwUPLp9NPXo5KJ0OD8V3gwCgy92E E7x3kVFBZNNufaeXKYUTqL8= =JCrd -END PGP SIGNATURE- -- __ Archives : http://tbudl.thebat.dutaint.com Moderators : mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] TBTech List: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] You are subscribed as : archive@jab.org
Re: rename folder
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 Hello Shauna Scott ! On Sat, 21 Apr 2001 18:29:21 -0600 GMT your local time, which was 22.04.2001, 02:29 (GMT+0200) where I live, you wrote: PM Hi you all, PM is there a way of renaming an existing TB folder without producing a new PM one, then transferrring all mails from the old one, then deleting the old PM one? - This was the only way I found yet of renaming a folder. There PM might be an easier approach ... ? [...] Welcome To TB and PGP! The text above is part of your message you quoted. You might realise that it looks a bit funny?! You can avoid that by just setting the word wrap of PGP to 0 (PGP Preferences, Tab folder Email). The editor of TB! shows really what you are going to send, so there is no behind the scene word wrapping of TB! which would make a PGP-word-wrap necessary. If anyone else already stated this before, forget my message, please! - - -- Best regards, Gerd == Using The Bat! Version 1.51 PGP/GPG-Keys on request mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=send_key - Mother's of teens know why animals eat their young. -BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE- Version: GnuPG v1.0.4h (Cygwin) - GnuPGshell v1.71 Comment: Digitally signed! So you know it's me!! Key_ID 0xD56C61 iD8DBQE64qlwTL+wetVsYYcRAn/JAKDNI8iqobIT/tuQSd2/tTbzJSdj9QCglGOM fnvnhfz2Ns8mY/SMDBAbnfY= =e1lq -END PGP SIGNATURE- -- __ Archives : http://tbudl.thebat.dutaint.com Moderators : mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] TBTech List: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] You are subscribed as : archive@jab.org
Re: Deleting HTML attachment
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 Hello Roland Burger ! On Sun, 15 Apr 2001 13:29:30 +0200 GMT your local time, which was 15.04.2001, 13:29 (GMT+0200) where I live, you wrote: Hmmm, I'm a bit lit in this thread (Happy Easter)!! but I gues you would like to have something that changes the address to e.g. Roland Burger at TBUDL %TO=""%TO='"%OFROMNAME on %ABoreplyNAME" %OREPLYADDR' I use a macro that uses a regex (I know, wrong group, that's why I'm not going to explain it!) one long line %TO=""%TO="""%OFROMNAME bei %setpattregexp=""(.*?)\@""%RegExpBlindMatch=""%OReplyAddr""%SubPatt=""1"" ""%OREPLYADDR" /one long line I didn't create it myself; someone else did it. May be it's a bit kludgy and could be improved, but it works :-)) [...] - -- Best regards, Gerd == Using The Bat! Version 1.51 PGP/GPG-Keys on request mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=send_key - Erwerbsregel #32 Sei vorsichtig mit dem was Du verkaufst Es knnte genau das erfllen, was der Kunde erwartet. -BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE- Version: GnuPG v1.0.4d (r3/Cygwin) - GnuPGshell v1.70 Comment: Digitally signed! So you know it's me!! Key_ID 0xD56C61 iD8DBQE62roOTL+wetVsYYcRAgnjAKCdmn/khEIfYtlQCpBwEp95n2Iw7wCdFULD pztgSxtdvsljmUwHtWyn4j4= =Wu+3 -END PGP SIGNATURE- -- __ Archives : http://tbudl.thebat.dutaint.com Moderators : mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] TBTech List: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] You are subscribed as : archive@jab.org
Re: no printing possible when to-field is empty
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 Hello Anton Sommer ! On Wed, 11 Apr 2001 17:35:17 +0200 GMT your local time, which was 11.04.2001, 17:35 (GMT+0200) where I live, you wrote: [...] Sorry, I started learning english last week, don't expect a good grammar from me :) ROTFLMAO!!! HAHAHA! If this is your English after a week learning, I guess you are going to teach English at Harvard in a month, he??? ;-) SCNR - -- Best regards and Happy Easter, Gerd == Using The Bat! Version 1.51 PGP/GPG-Keys on request mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=send_key - A computer scientist is someone who fixes things which aren't broken. -BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE- Version: GnuPG v1.0.4d (r3/Cygwin) - GnuPGshell v1.70 Comment: Digitally signed! So you know it's me!! Key_ID 0xD56C61 iD8DBQE61Y82TL+wetVsYYcRAsCoAJ0Vf6CMsYn6gW5dElyNQYXDpC05ZgCg+iF+ 0iHn56Mk30uQPY/inQqemRs= =0JrF -END PGP SIGNATURE- -- __ Archives : http://tbudl.thebat.dutaint.com Moderators : mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] TBTech List: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] You are subscribed as : archive@jab.org
Re: Killing threads
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 Hello Krister Ekstrom ! On Mon, 2 Apr 2001 10:11:46 +0200 GMT your local time, which was 02.04.2001, 10:11 (GMT+0200) where I live, you wrote: Hi Bat! people! When reading messages in thread mode, is it possible to delete a whole thread rather than one message at a time? [...] In addition for mouse users: Right click on one of the messages in the thread, select Thread, Delete - -- Best regards, Gerd == Using The Bat! Version 1.51 PGP/GPG-Keys on request mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=send_key - Unser Gehirn ist kein Gefss, das gefllt werden will, sondern ein Feuer, das gezndet werden will. (Plutarch) -BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE- Version: GnuPG v1.0.4d (r3/Cygwin) - GnuPGshell v1.60 Comment: Digitally signed! So you know it's me!! Key_ID 0xD56C61 iD8DBQE6yHySTL+wetVsYYcRAlZeAJ9pffAq6PnKBFGCNjxEclGZAQnhNgCfc6Li Zf+Bf3HIUg9mF3WZj0eeDmM= =eGuh -END PGP SIGNATURE- -- __ Archives : http://tbudl.thebat.dutaint.com Moderators : mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] TBTech List: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] You are subscribed as : archive@jab.org
Re: PGP
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 Hello Nick Andriash ! On Sat, 31 Mar 2001 09:59:47 -0800 GMT your local time, which was 31.03.2001, 19:59 (GMT+0200) where I live, you wrote: Gerd, can you tell me if you compiled GPG yourself, or did you install one of the pre-compiled Win32 versions? No, I didn't compile it myself, but it is a re-compiled version which is highly beta and not available in the net. What differences are there between 1.0.4d and the 1.0.4-1 that I'm using? 1. IDEA.DLL is implemented via options 2. Cipher- and digest-algorithms sequence changed (AFAIK for compatibility reasons PGP 5.x): cipher-algo: CAST5 - BLOWFISH - RIJNDAEL - TWOFISH digest-algo: SHA1 - RMD160 3. "unsecure memory" warning disabled 4. "this is a developer version, don't use with ..." warning disabled (although it *is* beta g). Maybe more which I don't know! But these are the most important changes. Together with the beta version of GnuPGShell I still test whether this is convenient and compatible with PGP. As you can see in one of my earlier postings there is still something to adjust if I use a RSA-key... - -- Best regards, Gerd == Using The Bat! Version 1.51 PGP/GPG-Keys on request mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=send_key - Seize the day;trust the morrow as little as possible. Horace (65-8BC) Roman Poet -BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE- Version: GnuPG v1.0.4d (r3/Cygwin) - GnuPGshell v1.60 Comment: Digitally signed! So you know it's me!! Key_ID 0xD56C61 iD8DBQE6xxZETL+wetVsYYcRAta+AJ4xVd7M4nquQFVK4zmUaga5SW/KPQCfQHbj uwBpvo5fwxArucQRz7XtXoY= =A3/z -END PGP SIGNATURE- -- __ Archives : http://tbudl.thebat.dutaint.com Moderators : mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] TBTech List: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] You are subscribed as : archive@jab.org
Re: PGP
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 Hello Dierk Haasis and Roland! On Sat, 31 Mar 2001 10:36:58 +0200 GMT your local time, which was 31.03.2001, 10:36 (GMT+0200) where I live, you wrote: [...] Checks out fine. Thanks for informing me. You replied on my message which didn't arrive here yet g. And to finish this: now a new attempt to use GPG properly - -- Best regards, Gerd == Using The Bat! Version 1.51 PGP/GPG-Keys on request mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=send_key - Never put off until tomorrow what you can do the day after tomorrow. Always put off until tomorrow the things you shouldn't do at all. -BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE- Version: GnuPG v1.0.4d (r3/Cygwin) - GnuPGshell v1.60 Comment: Digitally signed! So you know it's me!! Key_ID 0xD56C61 iD8DBQE6xZ2TTL+wetVsYYcRAuSgAKDl8sR3+bx/YrrKpl4e1wkcahctkACg1xeR BgPI38VfjnVRnZMQvnsoWLk= =fhCs -END PGP SIGNATURE- -- __ Archives : http://tbudl.thebat.dutaint.com Moderators : mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] TBTech List: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] You are subscribed as : archive@jab.org
Re: PGP
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hello Thomas ! On Fri, 30 Mar 2001 22:22:42 +0800 GMT your local time, which was 30.03.2001, 16:22 (GMT+0200) where I live, you wrote: [...] DH BTW, I really am verifying messages from this list. Wow! Are you on a flat rate, or have you taken the time to download each poster's public key, or how do you do it? Obviously you never used PGP, so you don't know that you don't have to download the pub key *each* time you verify a message. You can import them into your keyring and check the revocation status from time to time I would like to invite you to use PGP (if you already do, sorry). Ingrid Spitzer (www.spitzer-web.de) wrote a very good tutorial on How to use PGP in The Bat! (Sorry, German version only, but I know that this is no problem for you). In case you have any problems or questions feel free to ask! [...] - -- Best regards, Gerd == Using The Bat! Version 1.51 PGP/GPG-Keys on request mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=send_key - Computers are useless. They can only give you answers. -BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE- Version: GnuPG v1.0.4d (r3/Cygwin) - GnuPGshell v1.60 Comment: http://www.bigfoot.com/~rsoft/gpgshell.html iD8DBQE6xLICTL+wetVsYYcRAV7PAKDG0S/XUnGPnGaNu/oBCwKXiWv8kgCgqlno J6J7oyGuJJiYZo5GaaJVsMQ= =/n0t -END PGP SIGNATURE- -- __ Archives : http://tbudl.thebat.dutaint.com Moderators : mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] TBTech List: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] You are subscribed as : archive@jab.org
Re: PGP
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 Hello Dierk Haasis ! On Fri, 30 Mar 2001 20:54:36 +0200 GMT your local time, which was 30.03.2001, 20:54 (GMT+0200) where I live, you wrote: But another thing: How come your signature comes out bad? Thanks for telling me this. I usually don't check my own sig. I now checked the same message in my sent-folder and BAD! Could be, that I still didn't adjust the GnuPG settings correctly to be fully compatible with PGP. Ok, now let's try the standard version PGP 6.5.8ckt - -- Best regards, Gerd == Using The Bat! Version 1.51 PGP/GPG-Keys on request mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=send_key - Erwerbsregel #27 Es gibt nichts gefhrlicheres als einen ehrlichen Geschftsmann. -BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE- Version: PGP 6.5.8 ckt Comment: Digitally signed for authentication! iQA/AwUBOsV5Kky/sHrVbGGHEQJ9WACgzW9Cs6Tw/3/v5Q8UV0ymdyi+n0wAnRRN CSeY8hyldULrJBF/pFwhFSaL =qjTg -END PGP SIGNATURE- -- __ Archives : http://tbudl.thebat.dutaint.com Moderators : mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] TBTech List: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] You are subscribed as : archive@jab.org
Re: RegEx
Hello syv ! On Wed, 7 Mar 2001 14:06:52 -0800 GMT your local time, which was 07.03.2001, 23:06 (GMT+0100) where I live, you wrote: I receive an email with this in the body: Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] It is on Line 6 - Char 1 I need to send a automatic reply to [EMAIL PROTECTED] Can somebody point me in the correct direction? With the Regexp it always has to be in line 6. Whenever this changes, you have to change the number in {} appropriatly. one long line %TO=""%To="%SETPATTREGEXP=""(?is)(^.*?){5}([EMAIL PROTECTED])""%REGEXPBLINDMATCH=""%text""%SUBPATT=""2""" /one long line I tested it with some test text without errors. But as I'm a beginner in Regexp I will not guarantee for nothing :-) -- Best regards, Gerd == Using The Bat! Version 1.51 PGP-Keys on request mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=send_key IBM: Its Better Manually -- __ Archives : http://tbudl.thebat.dutaint.com Moderators : mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] TBTech List: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] You are subscribed as : archive@jab.org
Re: Sorry!!! ( RegEx)
Hello Gerd Ewald ! On Sat, 10 Mar 2001 00:05:00 +0100 GMT your local time, which was 10.03.2001, 00:05 (GMT+0100) where I live, you wrote: I tested it with some test text without errors. But as I'm a beginner in Regexp I will not guarantee for nothing :-) I'm sorry. It is obviously too late: this topic belongs to TBTech and I forgot to move the thread. Beg your pardon! Will go to bed now Zzzzh -- Best regards, Gerd == Using The Bat! Version 1.51 PGP-Keys on request mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=send_key Erwerbsregel #59 Guter Rat ist teuer. -- __ Archives : http://tbudl.thebat.dutaint.com Moderators : mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] TBTech List: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] You are subscribed as : archive@jab.org
Re: RegEx
Hello Gerd Ewald ! On Sat, 10 Mar 2001 00:05:00 +0100 GMT your local time, which was 10.03.2001, 00:05 (GMT+0100) where I live, you wrote: With the Regexp it always has to be in line 6. Whenever this changes, [...] %TO=""%To="%SETPATTREGEXP=""(?is)(^.*?){5} [...] Sorry, it wasn't my day yesterday. I posted the correct answer to TBTech! Sorry for the noise! -- Best regards, Gerd == Using The Bat! Version 1.51 PGP-Keys on request mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=send_key If I worked as much as others, I would do as little as they. -- __ Archives : http://tbudl.thebat.dutaint.com Moderators : mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] TBTech List: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] You are subscribed as : archive@jab.org
Re: TB! CKT 6.5.8 plugin?
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 Hello [EMAIL PROTECTED] ! On Tue, 27 Feb 2001 08:30:31 + GMT your local time, which was 27.02.2001, 09:30 (GMT+0100) where I live, you wrote: Could anyone be so kind as to tell me where I can get the plugin for TB! for 6.5.8 ckt please? It is the same plugin you used for PGP 6.xxx. You can get it from www.ritlabs.com. The plugin just shows the wrong version, which can be changed by hex-editing/patching the dll. HTH - -- Best regards, Gerd == Using The Bat! Version 1.49 PGP-Keys on request mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=send_key - Murphys Law 19: Jeder hat irgendeinen Plan, der garantiert nicht funktioniert. -BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE- Version: GnuPG v1.0.4-1 (MingW32) - GnuPGshell v1.51 Comment: Digitally signed! So you know It's me!! Key_ID 0xD56C6187 iD8DBQE6m2iUTL+wetVsYYcRAmAVAKD7xk6RxTalmleWhEcyVAvGcyBmuACghf1H FK5PYF6h14S/Itbk34mDPyQ= =KwPp -END PGP SIGNATURE- -- __ Archives : http://tbudl.thebat.dutaint.com Moderators : mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] TBTech List: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] You are subscribed as : archive@jab.org
Re: TB and GPG (was:TB! CKT 6.5.8 plugin?)
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 Hello Lars Geiger ! On Tue, 27 Feb 2001 11:02:49 +0100 GMT your local time, which was 27.02.2001, 11:02 (GMT+0100) where I live, you wrote: Have you found a suitable way to get GPG to work with TB! ? Could you tell me, how you did that? Well, it wasn't me alone. Ingrid Spitzer and Jrgen Frisch supported me and made it possible. In fact it isn't too difficult; only a plugin is missing. AFAIK Jrgen prepares an installation guide which will be published somewhere; Ingrid is writing a tutorial "How to implement PGP in TB" and I'm sure there will be a chapter "How GPG can be used in TB". The tutorial is a topic in the German [EMAIL PROTECTED] (or is it still egroups.de???); so if you are a member there you will receive this soon. Mmmhh, I will ask Jrgen whether we may translate his guide into English and publish it here (maybe someone bilingual can help me here; e.g. Thomas English is much better than mine; he could improve some things). I will let you know what Jrgen thinks about that! - -- Best regards, Gerd == Using The Bat! Version 1.49 PGP-Keys on request mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=send_key - According to my calculations the problem doesn't exist. -BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE- Version: GnuPG v1.0.4-1 (MingW32) - GnuPGshell v1.51 Comment: Digitally signed! So you know It's me!! Key_ID 0xD56C6187 iD8DBQE6m4lFTL+wetVsYYcRAudpAJ4nkVx9aAncEmLRcYHVG1RDPMwRngCfVE/C ra/FcgCegmHbl+LeVcmXfRs= =Y/cv -END PGP SIGNATURE- -- __ Archives : http://tbudl.thebat.dutaint.com Moderators : mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] TBTech List: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] You are subscribed as : archive@jab.org
Re: TB! CKT 6.5.8 plugin?
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 Hello A Curtis Martin ! On Tue, 27 Feb 2001 06:16:11 -0500 GMT your local time, which was 27.02.2001, 12:16 (GMT+0100) where I live, you wrote: Here's some information I received from Graham, one of our former users: =Start== The current Windows version of GnuPG is run on the command line and has no keyserver access, No, it has access and there is a Windows Shell (in English). [...] (for patent reasons allied to its "non-commercial" philosophy, IDEA as originally devised by RSA is not supported by GnuPG, and that in essence means no PGP 2.6.x support). No, IDEA is implemented in a special version or may be added as add-on but only for *non-commercial* use. [...] Should any Batties receive a GnuPG encrypted/signed message, WinPT will verify and decrypt it, The Shell provides a product called GPGTray ;-) doing exactly what Graham wrote. It may be used with Ctrl-A for selecting all text, Ctrl-C for copying it to Clipboard: the shell provides two hotkeys which I defined for me as ctrl-alt-A for "sign and encrypt" and ctrl-alt-S for "clear-signing". In my case the text in the editor is replaced by either the encrypted or signed text of the clipboard and any TB user not having PGP 7.0 will find GnuPG can do the same using WinPT for PGP 7.0. It recognises both Twofish and AES Rijndael algorithms, for instance. Well, everyone using PGP shouldn't have any problems to verify my messages or decrypt them as I set some PGP-compatibility options (like HASH and algorithm). Using GnuPG is not the easiest thing in the world, but made very much easier with WinPT, and I'll be happy to help anybody wishing to try it. Confirmed and seconded!!! So, GPG is an alternative and will be even more one if a plugin comes with TB! ==End= Things may have improved since then since this message was sent to me in Nov 2000. WinPT may have improved since then. Here are some links with updated information: www.gnupg.org official page MingW32-GnuPG for Windows install ftp://ftp.gnupg.de/pub/gcrypt/binary/gnupg-w32-1.0.3.zip first, then http://www.nullify.org/gnupg-w32-1.0.4-1-idea.zip http://www.jumaros.de/rsoft/index.html GnuPG-Shell for Win - -- Best regards, Gerd == Using The Bat! Version 1.49 PGP-Keys on request mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=send_key - Beyond each corner new directions lie in wait. Stanislaw Lec -BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE- Version: GnuPG v1.0.4-1 (MingW32) - GnuPGshell v1.51 Comment: Digitally signed! So you know It's me!! Key_ID 0xD56C6187 iD8DBQE6m8AUTL+wetVsYYcRAq5aAKDDNiKLMyz5puhSwNZJQAHhe7SKoQCfQ1cD szhCKcwu442Kgv/LMNooMcw= =cmyC -END PGP SIGNATURE- -- __ Archives : http://tbudl.thebat.dutaint.com Moderators : mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] TBTech List: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] You are subscribed as : archive@jab.org
Re: TB! CKT 6.5.8 plugin?
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 Hello Gerd Ewald ! On Tue, 27 Feb 2001 15:56:28 +0100 GMT your local time, which was 27.02.2001, 15:56 (GMT+0100) where I live, you wrote: [...] It may be used with Ctrl-A for selecting all text, Ctrl-C for copying it to Clipboard: the shell provides two hotkeys which I defined for me as ctrl-alt-A for "sign and encrypt" and ctrl-alt-S for "clear-signing". In my case the text in the editor is replaced by either the encrypted or signed text of the clipboard [...] I don't tend to talk to myself, but this is an errata!! I just received an info from Jrgen that I can start the shell woth the following parameters: GPGTray.EXE /acv In this case you only have to hit the shortcut for "encrypt and sign" or "clear-sign" in TB and GPGTray will mark, copy, sign/encrypt and replace text in editor automagically. Works like a charm here. The PGP compatibility on good verification is only given when DH/DSS keys are used; so is my experience. - -- Best regards, Gerd == Using The Bat! Version 1.49 PGP-Keys on request mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=send_key - 50 million potential S/Mime users can't be wrong.. But they can all be stupid! (Sam Simpson) -BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE- Version: GnuPG v1.0.4-1 (MingW32) - GnuPGshell v1.51 Comment: Digitally signed! So you know It's me!! Key_ID 0xD56C6187 iD8DBQE6m80BTL+wetVsYYcRAt4lAKDSC8T8oyq8bnrkrPz2w1nciHgDDgCgr5YF 2tDB0MwB1OqDTnWBW/3dBZM= =8o/5 -END PGP SIGNATURE- -- __ Archives : http://tbudl.thebat.dutaint.com Moderators : mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] TBTech List: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] You are subscribed as : archive@jab.org
Re: Digest (02/24/2001 22:42) Special Issue (#2001-859)
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 Hello Dierk Haasis ! On Sun, 25 Feb 2001 09:03:26 +0100 GMT your local time, which was 25.02.2001, 09:03 (GMT+0100) where I live, you wrote: [...] You don't have to change anything through their web interface. When GMX implemented SMTP authentication I checked this in TB! and never did anything on the web. And it worked. Then someone posted that you have to change the option at GMX, well, I did, and it works still. FYI Confirmed: I never had any problems with the gmx-account. I did exactly as Dierk did. [...] - -- Best regards, Gerd == Using The Bat! Version 1.49 PGP-Keys on request mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=send_key - Erwerbsregel #38 Gratis-Werbung ist billig. -BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE- Version: PGP 6.5.8 ckt Comment: Digitally signed for authentication purposes! iQA/AwUBOpjYkky/sHrVbGGHEQJ2RwCfc7FhdVIhY6b6ioXYwwOZm9sUyVIAoLrR h1XwwLx7AlLYZPEWEMsBY0aH =mZ/s -END PGP SIGNATURE- -- __ Archives : http://tbudl.thebat.dutaint.com Moderators : mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] TBTech List: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] You are subscribed as : archive@jab.org
Re: My pgp filter seems to be back to normal!
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 Hello Mike Yetto ! On Mon, 12 Feb 2001 22:51:04 -0500 GMT your local time, which was 13.02.2001, 04:51 (GMT+0100) where I live, you wrote: [...] Ah ha! I saved Krister's message as a text file and it verified as 'good' with PGPTray. Confirmed! I think the problem is with this line. Obtain my pgp keys by sending a mail to this address: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=Send_pgp_keys Confirmed! Which shows as two lines in the original message view window, but as one line when I viewed it with a text editor. And in TB editor when auto-wrap is turned off and mail is opened in editor. I have Auto-Wrap set which would cause the view of the message to be different for PGPTray than what the plug-in is using. With Auto-Wrap off I PGPTray will verify the signiture as 'good'. But this means, that the TB-plugin knows how to deal with such lines. Ergo: If you want to verify a message in TB you *have* to use the plugin because PGPTray might not realize the auto-wrapped long line! - -- Best regards, Gerd == Using The Bat! Version 1.49 PGP-Keys on request mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=send_key - "Hunde haben alle guten Eigenschaften des Menschen, ohne gleichzeitig ihre Fehler zu besitzen." (Friedrich II. der Groe) -BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE- Version: PGP 6.5.8 Comment: Digitally signed for authentication purposes ! Gerd Ewald iQA/AwUBOolLZ0y/sHrVbGGHEQIZ/wCeKt5atjdYuf0L0qjKTls793KgBpQAn3ts ybVf6xbQxXroiOwTgUgP27OE =EUA7 -END PGP SIGNATURE- -- __ Archives : http://tbudl.thebat.dutaint.com Moderators : mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] TBTech List: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] You are subscribed as : archive@jab.org
Re: My pgp filter seems to be back to normal!
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 Hello Krister Ekstrom ! On Tue, 13 Feb 2001 11:27:07 +0100 GMT your local time, which was 13.02.2001, 11:27 (GMT+0100) where I live, you wrote: So now what? Should i stop signing my mails for now, or what should i do? No, keep on using PGP. There is nothing wrong with it. Is it a bug in the pgp dll of the bat!? No, not really. As you can see from my other posting it is obviously a different interpretation. [...] Everyone who requests my key gets put in a special address book group called pgp users, maybe i should send my fingerprint to that group and they can check what's wrong with it. I'm not that good at pgp-ing myself. This is not a matter of the key. Everything is ok. I don't think the key is tampered. - -- Best regards, Gerd == Using The Bat! Version 1.49 PGP-Keys on request mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=send_key - Anyone can count the seeds in an apple. No one can count the apples in a seed. -BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE- Version: PGP 6.5.8 Comment: Digitally signed for authentication purposes ! Gerd Ewald iQA/AwUBOolMuUy/sHrVbGGHEQJjgQCgzmQE9l3JP1/RClR3XlIrCm/2lkMAnjPQ 0OuNkfh2Ck7stLjqRvsT/Vxd =2sRD -END PGP SIGNATURE- -- __ Archives : http://tbudl.thebat.dutaint.com Moderators : mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] TBTech List: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] You are subscribed as : archive@jab.org
Re: My pgp filter seems to be back to normal!
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 Hello Nick Andriash ! On Mon, 12 Feb 2001 09:36:35 -0800 GMT your local time, which was 12.02.2001, 18:36 (GMT+0100) where I live, you wrote: [...] So you are saying that you checked his message and the signature verified as "Good"? If so, then I don't understand why it shows "Bad" on my machine, and can think no reason what, why or where the message itself would have been tampered with. Are you *sure* you get a "Good" signature on his first message in this thread? Anyone else getting a good signature? I'm using PGP 7.0.3 but that shouldn't make any difference at all. As you can see, your signature checks out just fine: Nick, the funny thing is that I get a GOOD signature when I use TB-plugin and a BAD when I use PGPTray. The key was downloaded by PGP; ID: 0x8313390B Fingerprint:D554 FB2E 50A7 AB9B 7CC1 18BC 3839 497A 8313 390B *** PGP Signature Status: bad *** Signer: Krister Ekstrom [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Invalid) *** Signed: 12.02.01 11:10:11 *** Verified: 12.02.01 19:11:04 *** BEGIN PGP VERIFIED MESSAGE *** I can't explain that. It is definitely the same message, just another way of verifying. [...] I was able reproduce this again - -- Best regards, Gerd == Using The Bat! Version 1.49 PGP-Keys on request mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=send_key - In a Copenhagen airline ticket office: We take your bags and send them in all directions. -BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE- Version: PGP 6.5.8 Comment: Digitally signed for authentication purposes ! Gerd Ewald iQA/AwUBOogbIUy/sHrVbGGHEQKFIgCfYtTuMTjZ8zYCMNrS13FXPi9sME0AoNUm OBev4lAdvyLhra+0FaghrBX6 =+oTq -END PGP SIGNATURE- -- __ Archives : http://tbudl.thebat.dutaint.com Moderators : mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] TBTech List: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] You are subscribed as : archive@jab.org