RFC 1896 (rfc1896) - Page 2 of 21
The text/enriched MIME Content-type
Alternative Format: Original Text Document
RFC 1896 text/enriched MIME Content-type February 1996
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.
There are other text formatting standards which meet some of these
criteria. In particular, HTML and SGML have come into widespread use
on the Internet. However, there are two important reasons that this
document further promotes the use of text/enriched in Internet mail
over other such standards:
1. Most MIME-aware Internet mail applications are already able to
either properly format text/enriched mail or, at the very least,
are able to strip out the formatting commands and display the
readable text. The same is not true for HTML or SGML.
2. The current RFC on HTML [RFC-1866] and Internet Drafts on SGML
have many features which are not necessary for Internet mail, and
are missing a few capabilities that text/enriched already has.
For these reasons, this document is promoting the use of
text/enriched until other Internet standards come into more
widespread use. For those who will want to use HTML, Appendix B of
this document contains a very simple C program that converts
text/enriched to HTML 2.0 described in [RFC-1866].
Syntax
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 "", 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
Resnick & Walker Informational