Enriched text
Enriched text is a formatted text format for e-mail, defined by the IETF in RFC 1896 and associated with the text/enriched
MIME type which is defined in RFC 1563. It is "intended to facilitate the wider interoperation of simple enriched text across a wide variety of hardware and software platforms". As of 2012, enriched text remained almost unknown in e-mail traffic, while HTML e-mail is widely used. Enriched text, or at least the subset of HTML that can be transformed into enriched text, is seen as preferable to full HTML for use with e-mail (mainly because of security considerations).[1]
Internet media type |
text/enriched |
---|---|
Type of format | Formatted text format |
Standard | RFC 1896 |
A predecessor of this MIME type was called text/richtext
in RFC 1341 and RFC 1521. Neither should be confused with Rich Text Format (MIME type text/rtf
or application/rtf
) which are unrelated specifications, devised by Microsoft.
A single newline in enriched text is treated as a space. Formatting commands are in the same style as SGML and HTML. They must be balanced and nested.
Enriched text is a supported format of Emacs[2], Mutt[3], Mulberry and Netscape Communicator.
Examples
Code | Output |
---|---|
<bold>Hello, <italic>world!</italic></bold>
|
Hello, world! |
<color><param>red</param>Blood</color> is <bold>thicker</bold> than
<color><param>blue</param>water</color>.
<paraindent><param>left</param><italic>-- Well-known proverb
</italic></paraindent>
|
Blood is thicker than water.
|
References
- Why HTML is Inappropriate for E-Mail
- https://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/manual/html_node/emacs/Enriched-Text.html
- "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2013-03-08. Retrieved 2013-02-26.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)