Plain text
{{two other uses||the cryptography meaning|Plaintext||Text}}{{Unreferenced|date=June 2007}}{{Mergeto|text file|date=July 2007}}In
computing,
plain text is a term used for an ordinary "unformatted" sequential file readable as textual material without much processing.The
encoding has traditionally been either
ASCII, one of its many derivatives such as
ISO/IEC 646 etc., or sometimes
EBCDIC. No other encodings are used in plain text files which neither contain any (character-based) structural tags such as heading marks, nor any typographic markers like bold face, italics, etc.
Unicode is today gradually replacing the older ASCII derivatives limited to 7 or 8 bit codes. It will probably serve much the same purposes, but this time permitting almost any human language as well as important punctuation and symbols such as mathematical relations (≠ ≤ ≥ ≈), multiplication (× •), etc, which are not included in the very rudimentary and incomplete ASCII set.
Usage
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- Plain text.png -
Text file, displayed by the command cat in a xterm window
The purpose of using
plain text today is primarily a "lowest common denominator" independence from programs that require their very own special encoding or formatting (with due sacrifices and limitations). Plain text files can be opened, read, and edited with most
text editors. Examples include
Notepad (
Windows),
edit (
DOS),
ed or
vi (
Unix,
Linux),
SimpleText (
Mac OS), or
TextEdit (
Mac OS X). Other computer programs are also capable of reading and importing plain text.It can also be used by simple computer tools such as line printing text commands like
type (DOS and Windows) and
cat (Unix).Plain text files are almost universal in
programming, a source code file containing instructions in a
programming language is almost always a plain text file. Plain text is also commonly used for
configuration files, who were read for saved settings at the startup of a program.
Related terms
The related term,
plaintext, is most commonly used in a cryptographic context, while
cleartext usually refers to lack of protection from
eavesdropping. Usage of these terms is such that there is some confusion amongst them, especially among those new to computers, cryptography, or data communications.
Philosophy
This reveals that plain text is in fact the technical user's
way to regard a file or a sequence of bytes. In this sense, there is no plain text, since bits are stored as states of latches, charges on transistor gates,
microscopic magnetic or
mechanical dots on a disk, etc, and
humans don't have the
senses needed to read this. The information must thus
appear as text (on screen or on paper) in order to
be text in this absolute sense of the word.Plain text is a way to represent
generic text without attributes such as fonts, subscripts, and boldface; due to this simplicity, it is readable and processable by almost
any computer program. In a way a
HTML,
SGML and an
XML file
is regarded as plain text, since no control codes (see
below) are used, but real structural tags are actually included in these formats. As regards to the SGML and XML author, these tags are "human readable" since that format author understands the structure by reading the format. This may illuminate the complications of the usage of terms within computer science: it's all a relative view point.
Encoding
Character encodings
Text was once commonly encoded in
ASCII, using 8
bits for one letter or other character, encoding 7 bits, allowing 128 values, and using the 8th as a checksum bit when transferring a file. This just allowed the ordinary
Latin alphabet, transfer control codes, parentheses and interpunction, which annoyed especially Portuguese and Swedish{{Fact|date=May 2008}} computer users. Therefore, when data transfer became more stable, the remaining 128 values were encoded, everywhere differently, and in a way that made multilingual texts impossible to encode. At last
Unicode was defined, which currently allows for 1,114,112 code values used for any modern text writing system, and a lot of extinct ones. For example Unicode codes Chinese, Hebrew, Cyrillic as well as Latin. Some of these text formats may be pretty complicated to process correctly, but they still contain no structural data, such as bold start and end markers, and are therefore plain text.
Control codes
The ASCII codes before Space,
' ', are not intended as displayable characters, but instead as control characters. They are used for a diversity of interpreted meanings, for example the code
NULL (=
0, sometimes denoted
Ctrl-@) is used as string end markers in the programming language C and successors. Most troublesome of these are the codes
LF (=
LINE FEED =
10 =
0AH) and
CR (=
CARRIAGE RETURN =
13 =
0DH). Windows and
OS/2 require the sequence
CR,LF to represent a newline, while
Unix and relatives uses just the
LF, and Classic Mac OS (but not Mac OS X) uses just the code CR. This was once a slight problem when transferring files between Windows and Unices, but today most computer programs treat this seamlessly.See also
PlaintextArchivo de textoنوشته سادهFichier texteTeks biasaPlatte tekstプレーンテキストRen tekstTexto planoПростой текстเพลนเท็กซ์
(...as imported from WP)
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