False alarm on "forgot to make it pretty" for message forwarded (and applying markdown to forwarded mails where not intended)
When composing a message, markdown-here-revival helpfully checks whether you wrote in markdown and asks you whether you meant to send in plain-text, or made pretty.
However, when I forward an email, I get lots of false positives because of things in the forwarded message. This doesn't happen if the messages are "replied" to.
This is annoying, as it breaks the flow of what you're trying to do, and it always takes me a moment to figure out what it's talking about (and often I either click "send" without thinking, or I don't notice the message didn't send when I start working on something else, only later to find that my mail didn't send).
If I do intend to use markdown, it then often messes with the forwarded email, which is also not ideal.
Ideal solution: Markdown-here-revival ignores everything below the -------- Forwarded Message --------
part of an email.
An example of a first message, I might receive:
Hello! This is the message I received. **The author** wrote this in text (even in HTML).
If I now forward this message, the outgoing email looks like this:
See this forwarded message. It triggers the "forgot to make it pretty" warning, even though nothing I wrote is markdown-like (and I don't want to pretti-fy the original email I'm forwarding).
-------- Forwarded Message --------
Subject: Test
Date: Tue, 31 Jan 2023 10:37:43 -0800
From: first person <first@e.mail>
To: second person <second@e.mail>
Hello! This is the message I received. **The author** wrote this in text (even in HTML).
This triggers the "It looks like you wrote this email in Markdown but forgot to make it pretty. Send it anyway?" warning.