On 30/11/2020 17:41, Julian Reschke wrote:
Am 30.11.2020 um 18:27 schrieb tom petch:
...
All the CSS preceding the text; well, that is what I got this morning
when prompted by Julian's post but tomorrow, well, tomorrow is another
day!
...
On what URL?
Julian
Apologies for a tardy response - I am on European time and so much of
the discussion is when I am in bed.
A bigger apology. I used the URL you gave of
https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc7230.txt
except that, when I look at the History of my web usage yesterday, I
omitted the final .txt. Repeating it with the .txt I get just the text
and no preceding CSS. So that was a red herring, omit the .txt and
'Save as' .txt saves all the CSS first; odd, but I know not to do that
again. (The logic escapes me but then this is HTTP/HTML whose logic
often does:-)
The loss of formatting when using HTTP/HTML is still an issue for me; I
recall it being an issue many years ago but not one I see with ftp://
I access
https://www.ietf.org/ietf-ftp/rfc/rfc5347.txt
(a URL most of which I took from an e-mail from Roman) and
Save target as
get a message that the download was successful (with .pdf I usually get
an error message at this point) am invited to open it, do so and have
lost the formatting, getting just a stream of characters. I lack a hex
editor at present (I am seeking to fix that) so do not know what is
there but suspect it is the long standing issue of terminating lines
with <CRLF> or something else.
I am sure that given time I will solve most of my problems, except,
probably, the loss of the original date for an RFC (that date is part of
my modus operandi).
The ongoing issue is, as others have commented on, I never know when and
what I am going to encounter next with HTTP/HTML, as with my inability
to signout the other day, or the Local Authority PC that insists that I
have to stop what I am working on and look at the latest e-mail to
arrive. I see HTTP/HTML as not as stable as I want it to be as the
basis for work, something I think I see at Enterprises where I work,
where HTTP/HTML is always used, but for pushing out information and
getting feedback, not for operational systems.
So thank your for taking an interest.
Tom Petch
Best regards, Julian
.