> I was perplexed by two things. The first was that anyone would think > -- t was a sig-sep, because a sig-sep is "Hyphen Hyphen Space Newline", > and the second was that I couldn't think of any particularly bad > effects that the -- t would cause. > > After all, if it's *not* recognised as a sig-sep, then -- t becomes > merely the last line of the message (wasn't that its intention?), > and if it *is* misinterpreted as a sig-sep, then anything after it > gets treated as a signature. Is that terrible? IDK. We're just told > it's "broken", "doesn't work", and "fails completely", rather than > being informed of which client produces what symptoms.
+1 I tried to ask these very questions but so far haven't seen any answers, so I'm still convinced that the complains are the result of a confusion. Stefan