RFC 1896 (rfc1896) - Page 3 of 21
The text/enriched MIME Content-type
Alternative Format: Original Text Document
RFC 1896 text/enriched MIME Content-type February 1996
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 "" appears at some
point, there must later be a "" 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.
Line break rules
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 section.
should be displayed by a text/enriched interpreter as follows:
This is a single line
This is the next line.
This is the next section.
The formatting commands, not all of which will be implemented by all
implementations, are described in the following sections.
Resnick & Walker Informational