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Re: README-Users.m4 > README.txt



Ross Boylan <RossBoylan@stanfordalumni.org> writes:

> At 04:08 PM 3/19/00, Adam Di Carlo wrote:
> 
> >It doesn't make sense to me to put windows EOL conventions on the text
> >file.  Instead, perhaps the file should be README.txt instead of
> >README.  FTP should be doing ASCII transfer and auto-converting.  HTTP
> >browsers should be using MIME type text/plain and also
> >auto-converting.  Really, there is no need to use *anything* but Unix
> >EOL conventions.
> 
> This still leaves the case of an MS Dos/Win user looking at a CD.  Html is 
> good, but some people don't have browsers or other viewing facilities.
> 
> Wordpad, at least in recent NT's, can handle Unix line end conventions, but 
> that is not the default document viewer.  I think most recent ms-windows 
> flavors have quickview, which may know how to handle the line ends (I'm not 
> sure of that).
> 
> >Please please please don't put DOS-centric stuff into Debian!
> 
> Well, can we achieve world domination without making it easy for the DOS 
> user to switch?  If the very first file they open is unreadable, it is 
> likely to be off-putting.
> 
> Readme.txt (rather than readme.) would make life easier for MS-land, but it 
> probably does need MS line ends to work well.
> Perhaps we should generate two versions of the file?  I know this is going 
> down a slippery slope ....

Indeed.

I leave this to the CD folks to worry about.  I've CC'd debian-cd.

But I thought ISO9660 images were EOL-independant somehow?  I dunno.

-- 
.....Adam Di Carlo....adam@onShore.com.....<URL:http://www.onShore.com/>


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