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Posted by lovecreatesbea...@gmail.com on 07/29/07 04:51
On Jul 26, 9:48 am, Sherm Pendley <spamt...@dot-app.org> wrote:
> "lovecreatesbea...@gmail.com" <lovecreatesbea...@gmail.com> writes:
> > I don't see any Html tag in some Html pages, for example, this one:
>
> >http://ftp.gnu.org/README
>
> That's not an HTML page.
I find that both http://ftp.gnu.org/README and ftp://ftp.gnu.org/README
(on IE6, I request ftp://ftp.gnu.org then double click on README.) get
exact the same file.
> > How does it make paragraphs, newlines ... without <P>, <BR> ...
> > respectively? And how does it present < and > without < and > ?
>
> Same way it's done in any plain text file.
Thank you.
I now have one more question.
Are the plain text files such as .txt, .c (source file of C code,
text), .sh (source file of Bourne shell code, text) on HTTP server
same as them presented on any brouwser? Do they have the same
appearance and layout including new-lines, continuous blanks on any
browser? Is it the same behavior cross browsers, does the standard
specifications specify this?
If I want to put some plain and simple text files on HTTP server, can
I choose filename suffixes such as .txt, .c, .h, .sh other than .htm
or .html? Is it a good choice?
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