From 591942bd83bfa896f2a67e9071ab9aefb32be4df Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: "Tammi L. Coles" Date: Fri, 15 Sep 2023 16:09:28 +0200 Subject: [PATCH] reformat comments as code blocks for visibility --- book/source/01-intro.md | 12 ++++-------- 1 file changed, 4 insertions(+), 8 deletions(-) diff --git a/book/source/01-intro.md b/book/source/01-intro.md index 87253a9..7d95c6a 100644 --- a/book/source/01-intro.md +++ b/book/source/01-intro.md @@ -10,9 +10,9 @@ This text is *not* intended as a guide for end-users of OpenPGP-related software OpenPGP is an open standard for cryptographic operations. OpenPGP supports the secure delivery of files and messages between a sender and a recipient as well as verification of the sender. OpenPGP is an outgrowth of the ["Pretty Good Privacy (PGP)"](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pretty_Good_Privacy) encryption program and has many widely used and interoperable implementations. -{::comment} -Heiko, let's be sure to create our own page on interoperability instead of linking to this -{:/comment} +```Heiko, let's be sure to create our own page on interoperability instead of linking to this``` + + ## Who is the audience for this document? @@ -24,9 +24,7 @@ OpenPGP is a system based on well-understood cryptographic building blocks. Thre This document is focused on the second group, software developers, who use OpenPGP functionality in their software projects. It describes the properties of the OpenPGP system and its uses. It presupposes solid knowledge of software development concepts and of general cryptographic concepts. Thus, this text describes OpenPGP at the "library-level," teaching concepts that will help software developers get started as a user of any implementation (e.g., OpenPGP JS, Sequoia PGP). -{::comment} -Heiko, we should elaborate a bit on why here -{:/comment} +```Heiko, we should elaborate a bit on why here``` This document is not intended for end-users. It is also not for implementers of libraries or software. @@ -35,9 +33,7 @@ This document is not intended for end-users. It is also not for implementers of The [OpenPGP RFC](https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-ietf-openpgp-crypto-refresh/) defines *the message formats used in OpenPGP* to *provide encryption with public-key or symmetric cryptographic algorithms, digital signatures, compression and key management.* -``` The RFC explains details (what goes where) that are crucial for implementers of software that handle internal OpenPGP data structures. However, it is not as critical for software developers who use OpenPGP through a library. -``` This document describes OpenPGP concepts at the "library" level of abstraction, ignoring much about how OpenPGP artifacts are encoded at the lowest level to address common OpenPGP artifacts as they are currently used.