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RFC1563 - The text/enriched MIME Content-type

王朝other·作者佚名  2008-05-31
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Network Working Group N. Borenstein

Request for Comments: 1563 Bellcore

Obsoletes: 1523 January 1994

Category: Informational

The text/enriched MIME Content-type

Status of this Memo

This memo provides information for the Internet community. This memo

does not specify an Internet standard of any kind. Distribution of

this memo is unlimited.

Abstract

MIME [RFC-1341, RFC-1521] defines a format and general framework for

the representation of a wide variety of data types in Internet mail.

This document defines one particular type of MIME data, the

text/enriched type, a refinement of the "text/richtext" type defined

in RFC1341. The text/enriched MIME type is intended to facilitate

the wider interoperation of simple enriched text across a wide

variety of hardware and software platforms.

Table of Contents

The Text/enriched MIME type.............................. 2

Formatting Commands...................................... 4

Font-Alteration Commands........................... 4

Fill/Justification Commands........................ 5

Indentation Commands............................... 6

Miscellaneous Commands............................. 6

Balancing and Nesting of Formatting Commands....... 7

Unrecognized formatting commands................... 8

White Space in Text/enriched Data........................ 8

Initial State of a text/enriched interpreter............. 8

Non-ASCII character sets................................. 8

Minimal text/enriched conformance........................ 9

Notes for Implementors................................... 9

Extensions to text/enriched.............................. 10

An Example............................................... 11

Security Considerations.................................. 12

Author's Address......................................... 12

Acknowledgements......................................... 12

References............................................... 12

Appendix A -- A Simple enriched-to-plain Translator in C. 13

Appendix B -- Differences from RFC1341 text/richtext.... 15

The Text/enriched MIME type

In order to promote the wider interoperability of simple formatted

text, this document defines an extremely simple suBType of the MIME

content-type "text", the "text/enriched" subtype. This subtype was

designed to meet the following criteria:

1. The syntax must be extremely simple to parse,

so that even teletype-oriented mail systems can

easily strip away the formatting information and

leave only the readable text.

2. The syntax must be extensible to allow for new

formatting commands that are deemed essential for

some application.

3. If the character set in use is ASCII or an 8-

bit ASCII superset, then the raw form of the data

must be readable enough to be largely

unobjectionable in the event that it is displayed

on the screen of the user of a non-MIME-conformant

mail reader.

4. The capabilities must be extremely limited, to

ensure that it can represent no more than is

likely to be representable by the user's primary

Word processor. While this limits what can be

sent, it increases the likelihood that what is

sent can be properly displayed.

This document defines a new MIME content-type, "text/enriched". The

content-type line for this type may have one optional parameter, the

"charset" parameter, with the same values permitted for the

"text/plain" MIME content-type.

The syntax of "text/enriched" is very simple. It represents text in

a single character set -- US-ASCII by default, although a different

character set can be specified by the use of the "charset" parameter.

(The semantics of text/enriched in non-ASCII character sets are

discussed later in this document.) All characters represent

themselves, with the exception of the "<" character (ASCII 60), which

is used to mark the beginning of a formatting command. Formatting

instrUCtions consist of formatting commands surrounded by angle

brackets ("<>", ASCII 60 and 62). Each formatting command may be no

more than 60 characters in length, all in US-ASCII, restricted to the

alphanumeric and hyphen ("-") characters. Formatting commands may be

preceded by a solidus ("/", ASCII 47), making them negations, and

such negations must always exist to balance the initial opening

commands. Thus, if the formatting command "<bold>" appears at some

point, there must later be a "</bold>" to balance it. (NOTE: The 60

character limit on formatting commands does NOT include the "<", ">",

or "/" characters that might be attached to such commands.)

Formatting commands are always case-insensitive. That is, "bold" and

"BoLd" are equivalent in effect, if not in good taste.

Beyond tokens delimited by "<" and ">", there are two other special

processing rules. First, a literal less-than sign ("<") can be

represented by a sequence of two such characters, "<<". Second, line

breaks (CRLF pairs in standard network representation) are handled

specially. In particular, isolated CRLF pairs are translated into a

single SPACE character. Sequences of N consecutive CRLF pairs,

however, are translated into N-1 actual line breaks. This permits

long lines of data to be represented in a natural- looking manner

despite the frequency of line-wrapping in Internet mailers. When

preparing the data for mail transport, isolated line breaks should be

inserted wherever necessary to keep each line shorter than 80

characters. When preparing such data for presentation to the user,

isolated line breaks should be replaced by a single SPACE character,

and N consecutive CRLF pairs should be presented to the user as N-1

line breaks.

Thus text/enriched data that looks like this:

This is

a single

line

This is the

next line.

This is the

next paragraph.

should be displayed by a text/enriched interpreter as follows:

This is a single line

This is the next line.

This is the next paragraph.

The formatting commands, not all of which will be implemented by all

implementations, are described in the following sections.

Formatting Commands

The text/enriched formatting commands all begin with <commandname>

and end with </commandname>, affecting the formatting of the text

between those two tokens. The commands are described here, grouped

according to type.

Font-Alteration Commands

The following formatting commands are intended to alter the font in

which text is displayed, but not to alter the indentation or

justification state of the text:

Bold -- causes the affected text to be in a bold font. Nested

bold commands have the same effect as a single bold

command.

Italic -- causes the affected text to be in an italic font.

Nested italic commands have the same effect as a single

italic command.

Fixed -- causes the affected text to be in a fixed width font.

Nested fixed commands have the same effect as a single

fixed command.

Smaller -- causes the affected text to be in a smaller font.

It is recommended that the font size be changed by two

points, but other amounts may be more appropriate in some

environments. Nested smaller commands produce ever-

smaller fonts, to the limits of the implementation's

capacity to reasonably display them, after which further

smaller commands have no incremental effect.

Bigger -- causes the affected text to be in a bigger font. It

is recommended that the font size be changed by two

points, but other amounts may be more appropriate in some

environments. Nested bigger commands produce ever-bigger

fonts, to the limits of the implementation's capacity to

reasonably display them, after which further bigger

commands have no incremental effect.

Underline -- causes the affected text to be underlined. Nested

underline commands have the same effect as a single

underline command.

While the "bigger" and "smaller" operators are effectively inverses,

it is not recommended, for example, that "<smaller>" be used to end

the effect of "<bigger>". This is properly done with "</bigger>".

Fill/Justification Commands

Initially, text/enriched text is intended to be displayed fully

filled with appropriate kerning and letter-tracking as suits the

capabilities of the receiving user agent software. Actual line width

is left to the discretion of the receiver, which is eXPected to fold

lines intelligently (preferring soft line breaks) to the best of its

ability.

The following commands alter that state. Each of these commands

force a line break before and after the formatting environment if

there is not otherwise a line break. For example, if one of these

commands occurs anywhere other than the beginning of a line of text

as presented, a new line is begun.

Center -- causes the affected text to be centered.

FlushLeft -- causes the affected text to be left-justified with a

ragged right margin.

FlushRight -- causes the affected text to be right-justified with a

ragged left margin.

FlushBoth -- causes the affected text to be filled and padded so

as to create smooth left and right margins, i.e., to be

fully justified.

Nofill -- causes the affected text to be displayed without filling

or justification.

The center, flushleft, flushright, and flushboth commands are

mutually exclusive, and, when nested, the inner command takes

precedence.

Whether or not text is justified by default (that is, whether the

default environment is flushleft, flushright, or flushboth) is

unspecified, and depends on the preferences of the user, the

capabilities of the local software and hardware, and the nature of

the character set in use. On systems where justification is

considered undesirable, the flushboth environment may be identical to

the default environment. Note that justification should never be

performed inside of center, flushleft, flushright, or nofill

environments. Note also that for some non-ASCII character sets, full

justification may be fundamentally inappropriate.

Indentation Commands

Initially, text/enriched text is displayed using the maximum

available margins. Two formatting commands may be used to affect the

margins.

Indent -- causes the running left margin to be moved to the

right. The recommended indentation change is the width of

four characters, but this may differ among

implementations.

IndentRight -- causes the running right margin to be moved to

the left. The recommended indentation change is the width

of four characters, but this may differ among

implementations.

A line break is NOT forced by a change of the margin, to permit the

description of "hanging" text. Thus for example the following text:

Now <indent> is the time for all good horses to come to the aid of

their stable, assuming that </indent> any stable is really stable.

would be displayed in a 40-character-wide window as follows:

Now is the time for all good horses to

come to the aid of their stable,

assuming that any stable is

really stable.

Miscellaneous Commands

Excerpt -- causes the affected text to be interpreted as a

textual excerpt from another source, probably a message

being responded to. Typically this will be displayed

using indentation and an alternate font, or by indenting

lines and preceding them with "> ", but such decisions are

up to the implementation. (Note that this is the only

truly declarative markup construct in text/enriched, and

as such doesn't fit very well with the other facilities,

but it describes a type of markup that is very commonly

used in email and has no procedural analogue.) Note that

as with the justification commands, the excerpt command

implicitly begins and ends with a line break if one is not

already there.

Param -- Marks the affected text as command parameters, to be

interpreted or ignored by the text/enriched interpreter,

but NOT to be shown to the reader. The syntax of the

parameter data (whatever appears between the initial

"<param>" and the terminating "</param>") is left

undefined by this memo, to be defined by text/enriched

extensions in the future. However, the format of such

data must NOT contain nested <param> commands, and either

must NOT use the "<" character or must use it in a way

that is compatible with text/enriched parsing. That is,

the end of the parameter data should be recognizable with

EITHER of two algorithms: simply searching for the first

occurence of "</param>" or parsing until a balanced

"</param>" command is found. In either case, however, the

parameter data should NOT be shown to the human reader.

Balancing and Nesting of Formatting Commands

Pairs of formatting commands must be properly balanced and nested.

Thus, a proper way to describe text in bold italics is:

<bold><italic>the-text</italic></bold>

or, alternately,

<italic><bold>the-text</bold></italic>

but, in particular, the following is illegal

text/enriched:

<bold><italic>the-text</bold></italic>

The nesting requirement for formatting commands imposes a slightly

higher burden upon the composers of text/enriched bodies, but

potentially simplifies text/enriched displayers by allowing them to

be stack-based. The main goal of text/enriched is to be simple

enough to make multifont, formatted email widely readable, so that

those with the capability of sending it will be able to do so with

confidence. Thus slightly increased complexity in the composing

software was deemed a reasonable tradeoff for simplified reading

software. Nonetheless, implementors of text/enriched readers are

encouraged to follow the general Internet guidelines of being

conservative in what you send and liberal in what you accept. Those

implementations that can do so are encouraged to deal reasonably with

improperly nested text/enriched data.

Unrecognized formatting commands

Implementations must regard any unrecognized formatting command as

"no-op" commands, that is, as commands having no effect, thus

facilitating future extensions to "text/enriched". Private

extensions may be defined using formatting commands that begin with

"X-", by analogy to Internet mail header field names.

In order to formally define extended commands, a new Internet

document should be published.

White Space in Text/enriched Data

No special behavior is required for the SPACE or TAB (HT) character.

It is recommended, however, that, at least when fixed-width fonts are

in use, the common semantics of the TAB (HT) character should be

observed, namely that it moves to the next column position that is a

multiple of 8. (In other words, if a TAB (HT) occurs in column n,

where the leftmost column is column 0, then that TAB (HT) should be

replaced by 8-(n mod 8) SPACE characters.) It should also be noted

that some mail gateways are notorious for losing (or, less commonly,

adding) white space at the end of lines, so reliance on SPACE or TAB

characters at the end of a line is not recommended.

Initial State of a text/enriched interpreter

Text/enriched is assumed to begin with filled text in a variable-

width font in a normal typeface and a size that is average for the

current display and user. The left and right margins are assumed to

be maximal, that is, at the leftmost and rightmost acceptable

positions.

Non-ASCII character sets

If the character set specified by the charset parameter on the

Content-type line is anything other than "US-ASCII", this means that

the text being described by text/enriched formatting commands is in a

non-ASCII character set. However, the commands themselves are still

the same ASCII commands that are defined in this document. This

creates an ambiguity only with reference to the "<" character, the

octet with numeric value 60. In single byte character sets, such as

the ISO-8859 family, this is not a problem; the octet 60 can be

quoted by including it twice, just as for ASCII. The problem is more

complicated, however, in the case of multi-byte character sets, where

the octet 60 might appear at any point in the byte sequence for any

of several characters.

In practice, however, most multibyte character sets address this

problem internally. For example, the ISO-2022 family of character

sets can switch back into ASCII at any moment. Therefore it is

specified that, before text/enriched formatting commands, the

prevailing character set should be "switched back" into ASCII, and

that only those characters which would be interpreted as "<" in plain

text should be interpreted as token delimiters in text/enriched.

The question of what to do for hypothetical future character sets

that do NOT subsume ASCII is not addressed in this memo.

Minimal text/enriched conformance

A minimal text/enriched implementation is one that converts "<<" to

"<", removes everything between a <param> command and the next

balancing </param> command, removes all other formatting commands

(all text enclosed in angle brackets), and, outside of <nofill>

environments, converts any series of n CRLFs to n-1 CRLFs, and

converts any lone CRLF pairs to SPACE.

Notes for Implementors

It is recognized that implementors of future mail systems will want

rich text functionality far beyond that currently defined for

text/enriched. The intent of text/enriched is to provide a common

format for expressing that functionality in a form in which much of

it, at least, will be understood by interoperating software. Thus,

in particular, software with a richer notion of formatted text than

text/enriched can still use text/enriched as its basic

representation, but can extend it with new formatting commands and by

hiding information specific to that software system in text/enriched

<param> constructs. As such systems evolve, it is expected that the

definition of text/enriched will be further refined by future

published specifications, but text/enriched as defined here provides

a platform on which evolutionary refinements can be based.

An expected common way that sophisticated mail programs will generate

text/enriched data is as part of a multipart/alternative construct.

For example, a mail agent that can generate enriched mail in ODA

format can generate that mail in a more widely interoperable form by

generating both text/enriched and ODA versions of the same data,

e.g.:

Content-type: multipart/alternative; boundary=foo

--foo

Content-type: text/enriched

[text/enriched version of data]

--foo

Content-type: application/oda

[ODA version of data]

--foo--

If such a message is read using a MIME-conformant mail reader that

understands ODA, the ODA version will be displayed; otherwise, the

text/enriched version will be shown.

In some environments, it might be impossible to combine certain

text/enriched formatting commands, whereas in others they might be

combined easily. For example, the combination of <bold> and <italic>

might produce bold italics on systems that support such fonts, but

there exist systems that can make text bold or italicized, but not

both. In such cases, the most recently issued (innermost) recognized

formatting command should be preferred.

One of the major goals in the design of text/enriched was to make it

so simple that even text-only mailers will implement enriched-to-

plain-text translators, thus increasing the likelihood that enriched

text will become "safe" to use very widely. To demonstrate this

simplicity, an extremely simple C program that converts text/enriched

input into plain text output is included in Appendix A.

Extensions to text/enriched

It is expected that various mail system authors will desire

extensions to text/enriched. The simple syntax of text/enriched, and

the specification that unrecognized formatting commands should simply

be ignored, are intend to promote such extensions.

Beyond simply defining new formatting commands, however, it may

sometimes be necessary to define formatting commands that can take

arguments. This is the intended use of the <param> construct. In

particular, software that wished to extend text/enriched to include

colored text might define an "x-color" environment which always began

with a color name parameter, to indicate the desired color for the

affected text.

An Example

Putting all this together, the following "text/enriched" body

fragment:

From: Nathaniel Borenstein <nsb@bellcore.com>

To: Ned Freed <ned@innosoft.com>

Content-type: text/enriched

<bold>Now</bold> is the time for

<italic>all</italic> good men

<smaller>(and <<women>)</smaller> to

<ignoreme>come</ignoreme>

to the aid of their

<x-color><param>red</param>beloved</x-color>

country.

By the way, I think that <<smaller>

should

REALLY be called

<<tinier>

and that I am always right.

-- the end

represents the following formatted text (which will, no doubt, look

somewhat cryptic in the text-only version of this document):

Now is the time for all good men (and <women>) to

come

to the aid of their

beloved country.

By the way, I think that <smaller>

should

REALLY be called

<tinier>

and that I am always right.

-- the end

where the word "beloved" would be in red on a color display if the

receiving software implemented the "x-color" extension.

Security Considerations

Security issues are not discussed in this memo, as the mechanism

raises no security issues.

Author's Address

For more information, the author of this document may be contacted

via Internet mail:

Nathaniel S. Borenstein

MRE 2D-296, Bellcore

445 South St.

Morristown, NJ 07962-1910

Phone: +1 201 829 4270

Fax: +1 201 829 5963

EMail: nsb@bellcore.com

Acknowledgements

This document reflects the input of many contributors, readers, and

implementors of the original MIME specification, RFC1341. It also

reflects particular contributions and comments from Terry Crowley,

Rhys Weatherley, and John LoVerso.

References

[RFC-1341] Borenstein, N., and N. Freed, "MIME (Multipurpose

Internet Mail Extensions): Mechanisms for Specifying

and Describing the Format of Internet Message Bodies",

RFC1341, Bellcore, Innosoft, June 1992.

[RFC-1521] Borenstein, N., and N. Freed, "MIME (Multipurpose

Internet Mail Extensions) Part One: Mechanisms for

Specifying and Describing the Format of Internet

Message Bodies", RFC1521, Bellcore, Innosoft,

September 1993.

Appendix A -- A Simple enriched-to-plain Translator in C

One of the major goals in the design of the text/enriched subtype of

the text Content-Type is to make formatted text so simple that even

text-only mailers will implement enriched-to-plain-text translators,

thus increasing the likelihood that multifont text will become "safe"

to use very widely. To demonstrate this simplicity, what follows is

a simple C program that converts text/enriched input into plain text

output. Note that the local newline convention (the single character

represented by "\n") is assumed by this program, but that special

CRLF handling might be necessary on some systems.

#include <stdio.h>

#include <ctype.h>

main() {

int c, i, paramct=0, newlinect=0, nofill=0;

char token[62], *p;

while ((c=getc(stdin)) != EOF) {

if (c == '<') {

if (newlinect == 1) putc(' ', stdout);

newlinect = 0;

c = getc(stdin);

if (c == '<') {

if (paramct <= 0) putc(c, stdout);

} else {

ungetc(c, stdin);

for (i=0, p=token; (c=getc(stdin)) != EOF && c != '>';

i++)

{ if (i < sizeof(token)-1)

*p++ = isupper(c) ? tolower(c) : c;

}

*p = '\0';

if (c == EOF) break;

if (strcmp(token, "param") == 0)

paramct++;

else if (strcmp(token, "nofill") == 0)

nofill++;

else if (strcmp(token, "/param") == 0)

paramct--;

else if (strcmp(token, "/nofill") == 0)

nofill--;

}

} else {

if (paramct > 0)

; /* ignore params */

else if (c == '\n' && nofill <= 0) {

if (++newlinect > 1) putc(c, stdout);

} else {

if (newlinect == 1) putc(' ', stdout);

newlinect = 0;

putc(c, stdout);

}

}

}

/* The following line is only needed with line-buffering */

putc('\n', stdout);

exit(0);

}

It should be noted that one can do considerably better than this in

displaying text/enriched data on a dumb terminal. In particular, one

can replace font information such as "bold" with textual emphasis

(like *this* or _T_H_I_S_). One can also properly handle the

text/enriched formatting commands regarding indentation,

justification, and others. However, the above program is all that is

necessary in order to present text/enriched on a dumb terminal

without showing the user any formatting artifacts.

Appendix B -- Differences from RFC1341 text/richtext

Text/enriched is a clarification, simplification, and refinement of

the type defined as text/richtext in RFC1341. For the benefit of

those who are already familiar with text/richtext, or for those who

want to exploit the similarities to be able to display text/richtext

data with their text/enriched software, the differences between the

two are summarized here. Note, however, that text/enriched is

intended to make text/richtext obsolete, so it is not recommended

that new software generate text/richtext.

0. The name "richtext" was changed to "enriched", both to

differentiate the two versions and because "richtext"

created widespread confusion with Microsoft's Rich Text

Format (RTF).

1. Clarifications. Many things were ambiguous or

unspecified in the text/richtext definition, particularly

the initial state and the semantics of richtext with

multibyte character sets. However, such differences are

OPERATIONALLY irrelevant, since the clarifications offered

in this document are at least reasonable interpretations of

the text/richtext specification.

2. Newline semantics have changed. In text/richtext, all

CRLFs were mapped to spaces, and line breaks were indicated

by "<nl>". This has been replaced by the "n-1" rule for

CRLFs.

3. The representation of a literal "<" character was "<lt>"

in text/richtext, but is "<<" in text/enriched.

4. The "nofill" command did not exist in text/richtext.

5. The "param" command did not exist in text/richtext.

6. The following commands from text/richtext have been

REMOVED from text/enriched: <COMMENT>, <OUTDENT>,

<OUTDENTRIGHT>, <SAMEPAGE>, <SUBSCRIPT>, <SUPERSCRIPT>,

<HEADING>, <FOOTING>, <ISO-8859-[1-9]>, <US-ASCII>,

<PARAGRAPH>, <SIGNATURE>, <NO-OP>, <LT>, <NL>, and <NP>.

7. All claims of SGML compatibility have been dropped.

However, with the possible exceptions of the new semantics

for CRLF and "<<" can be implemented, text/enriched should

be no less SGML-friendly than text/richtext was.

8. In text/richtext, there were three commands (<NL>, <NP>,

and <LT>) that did not use balanced closing delimiters.

Since all of these have been eliminated, there are NO

exceptions to the nesting/balancing rules in text/enriched.

9. The limit on the size of formatting tokens has been

increased from 40 to 60 characters.

 
 
 
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