![]() Letter-by-letter, symbol-by-symbol… On the other hand I don’t do it awfully lot as browsers can securely store your passwords too, all you need is to do one log in into your google (or whatever you use) account. What I do when I need to enter a password on my mobile is I’m opening up vim on my laptop and typing a password on my phone. ![]() You can use them on mobile devices to autofill forms, which is really hard to do with vim.They usually offer browser plugins that will autofill passwords on login forms.This makes these password managers perfect for ogranisations. You can share your passwords with others.They do have a few advantages compared to the vim-encrypted file on your dropbox (or google drive). ![]() Most popular ones are 1password, lastpass, and keeper. What you can use though is a passwords manager. Obviously, storing passwords in unencrypted form or on easily accessible medium is a big no-no. ~You can write your passwords in your notebook~… Okay, okay, I will not talk nonsense here. ~/Dropbox/secrets (you can get a little more security via obfuscation and call the file “my-best-recepie” or something like this :) ). Simply create a vim-encrypted file in your dropbox, i.e.There are other solutions like it, they all should work the same. If that’s the case, it allows you to synchronise your files between different devices. ![]() If you don’t know what dropbox is you’ve been living under the rock for at least past 10 years. It sets file type to plain text, doesn’t allow to create a swapfile (we only want one single copy of the file), wipes out the file buffer once you switch to any other buffer, and allows to paste lines of any length without breaking the line. # vi: ft=text noswapfile bufhidden=wipe tw=0 ![]()
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