@setfilename auth.info
@settitle Emacs auth-source Library @value{VERSION}
-@documentencoding UTF-8
+@include docstyle.texi
@copying
This file describes the Emacs auth-source library.
-Copyright @copyright{} 2008--2015 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
+Copyright @copyright{} 2008--2016 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
@quotation
Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
You can use spaces inside a password or other token by surrounding the
token with either single or double quotes.
-You can use single quotes inside a password or other token by
-surrounding it with double quotes, e.g. @code{"he'llo"}. Similarly you
+You can use apostrophes inside a password or other token by
+surrounding it with double quotes, e.g., @code{"he'llo"}. Similarly you
can use double quotes inside a password or other token by surrounding
-it with single quotes, e.g. @code{'he"llo'}. You can't mix both (so a
-password or other token can't have both single and double quotes).
+it with apostrophes, e.g., @code{'he"llo'}. You can't mix both (so a
+password or other token can't have both apostrophes and double quotes).
All this is optional. You could just say (but we don't recommend it,
we're just showing that it's possible)
Your netrc entries will then be:
@example
-machine gmail login account@@gmail.com password "accountpassword" port imap
-machine gmail2 login account2@@gmail.com password "account2password" port imap
+machine gmail login account@@gmail.com password "account password" port imap
+machine gmail2 login account2@@gmail.com password "account2 password" port imap
@end example
@node Secret Service API