The mailcap format is documented in RFC 1524, ``A User Agent
Configuration Mechanism For Multimedia Mail Format Information'', but
is not an Internet standard. However, mailcap files are supported on
-most Unix systems.
+most \UNIX{} systems.
\begin{funcdesc}{findmatch}{caps\, MIMEtype\, key\, filename\, plist}
Return a 2-tuple; the first element is a string containing the command
a truly skilful and determined attacker to break the cipher. So if you want
to keep the NSA out of your files, this rotor cipher may well be unsafe, but
for discouraging casual snooping through your files, it will probably be
-just fine, and may be somewhat safer than using the Unix \file{crypt}
+just fine, and may be somewhat safer than using the \UNIX{} \file{crypt}
command.
\index{National Security Agency}\index{crypt(1)}
% XXX How were Unix commands represented in the docs?
-
The mailcap format is documented in RFC 1524, ``A User Agent
Configuration Mechanism For Multimedia Mail Format Information'', but
is not an Internet standard. However, mailcap files are supported on
-most Unix systems.
+most \UNIX{} systems.
\begin{funcdesc}{findmatch}{caps\, MIMEtype\, key\, filename\, plist}
Return a 2-tuple; the first element is a string containing the command
a truly skilful and determined attacker to break the cipher. So if you want
to keep the NSA out of your files, this rotor cipher may well be unsafe, but
for discouraging casual snooping through your files, it will probably be
-just fine, and may be somewhat safer than using the Unix \file{crypt}
+just fine, and may be somewhat safer than using the \UNIX{} \file{crypt}
command.
\index{National Security Agency}\index{crypt(1)}
% XXX How were Unix commands represented in the docs?
-