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.txt - Current specifications for the .txt format |  | .txt - Current specifications for the .txt format: Encyclopedia II - .txt - Current specifications for the .txt format |  | As of 2006, there are lots of .txt formats currently in use. They may differ on which language they are intended for, on formatting characters semantics, on amount of bits characters require, etc. For writing English text, the format used is called ASCII. For writing text in many languages, there's a collection of Unicode-based formats, like UTF-8 and UTF-16. If one is using and old Macintosh, then the newline command is associated to the ASCII character number 13. If one is using Unix, then the ASCII character is number 10. If, instead, the person using an IBM Mainframe, the ...
See also:.txt, .txt - History, .txt - Plain text versus .txt, .txt - Current specifications for the .txt format, .txt - Standard Windows .txt files, .txt - Standard Mac .txt files, .txt - Standard Unix .txt files |  | | .txt, .txt - Current specifications for the .txt format, .txt - History, .txt - Plain text versus .txt, .txt - Standard Mac .txt files, .txt - Standard Unix .txt files, .txt - Standard Windows .txt files, Binary and text files, ASCII, EBCDIC, Newline, Text editor, Unicode |  | |
|  |  | .txt: Encyclopedia II - .txt - Current specifications for the .txt format
.txt - Current specifications for the .txt format
As of 2006, there are lots of .txt formats currently in use. They may differ on which language they are intended for, on formatting characters semantics, on amount of bits characters require, etc. For writing English text, the format used is called ASCII. For writing text in many languages, there's a collection of Unicode-based formats, like UTF-8 and UTF-16. If one is using and old Macintosh, then the newline command is associated to the ASCII character number 13. If one is using Unix, then the ASCII character is number 10. If, instead, the person using an IBM Mainframe, then he would be using EBCDIC format and next line would be number 15.
.txt - Standard Windows .txt files
.txt - Standard Mac .txt files
.txt - Standard Unix .txt files
Other related archivesbolding, italics, ASCII, Binary and text files, EBCDIC, English, IBM, Macintosh, Mainframe, Newline, README, TXT, Text editor, UTF-16, UTF-8, Unicode, Unix, Windows, binary files, characters, filename extension, language, metadata, newline, plain text, platform independent, terminal, text editor
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Current specifications for the .txt format", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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