John C Klensin wrote:BUT the pdf is not allowed to be normative. Changing that rule alone would--On Thursday, 05 January, 2006 08:25 -0600 "Ash, Gerald R \\(Jerry\\)" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: be sufficient to allow modern graphics to be called up in normative texts. Please clarify this. Are you saying that if the WG/WGchairs/ADs agree that the non-ASCIII find it interesting that it has not been taken advantage of more often (and, for the record, I'm one of those who has taken advantage of it). When it has been done for artwork purposes, the artwork in the ASCII version has sometimes been pretty rudimentary. In practice, whether it is "good enough" has been made on a case by case basis by WG Chairs and WGs or, for non-WG documents, by whether or not the relevant people are willing to read and consider those documents. version should be the normative version (because they want the better artwork), then that's OK? I thought I asked this a long time ago and was told no. ...and if it's not the pdf version of the text including graphics will become the RFC?Similarly, when PDF has been posted in order to exhibit non-ASCII characters, it has proven helpful to have Unicode character offsets (i.e., U+nnnn representations) in both the ASCII and PDF forms to ensure complete precision even though the character-glyphs themselves appear only in the PDF form. So, consider the first baby step to have been taken: nothing prevents you from posting an I-D in both ASCII and PDF today, and the relevant sub-community will sort out, on a case by case basis, whether the ASCII is good enough. - Stewart |
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