The RFC Editor -- 2 Feb 1990 -- TCP/IP list http://www-mice.cs.ucl.ac.uk/multimedia/misc/tcp_ip/9002.mm.www/0177.html ------------------------------------------------------------------------- About RFCs in Postscript and Ascii Hi: RFCs have been traditionally published in ASCII text. The IAB has decided that RFCs may be published in PostScript. This decision is motivated by the desire to include diagrams, drawings, and such in RFCs. It also allows authors that normally work with document production tools that produce PostScript output to use their normal tools. PostScript documents (on paper, so far) are visually more appealing and have improved readability. PostScript was chosen for the fancy form of RFC publication over other possible systems (e.g., impress, interpress, oda) because of the perceived wide spread availability of PostScript capable printers. It has been pointed out that many RFC users read the documents online and use various text oriented tools (e.g., emacs, grep) to search them. Often, brief excerpts from RFCs are included in e-mail. These practices are not yet practical with PostScript files. Therefore, the IAB has also decided that when ever an RFC is published in PostScript a secondary version of that RFC is to be made available in ASCII text. This secondary version may be missing some elements of the primary version (e.g., diagrams), and be formatted differently. Work is in progress to provide the secondary versions of the PostScript RFCs already published. It has also been pointed out that PostScript is less standard that has been assumed and that several of the document production systems that claim to produce PostScript actually produce nonstandard results. It may be necessary to identify a set of document production systems authorized for use in production of PostScript RFCs, based on the reasonableness of the output files they generate. --jon. (The RFC Editor)