ancients-moderns dispute (was: PDF, Postscript, and normative versions (was: Re: Baby Steps (was RE: Alternative formats for IDs)))

2006-01-06 Thread JFC (Jefsey) Morfin
We need to get out this ancients vs moderns dispute. Ancients saying 
they have no experience of actual need by moderns, and moderns saying 
this is because the ancient culture does not permit it.


Is there an objection to quote non-ascii documents hyperlinks? I suppose not.

Why not to just to proceed step by step and experiment? Let create an 
optional non-ascii art RFC-Editor repositories, for images quoted in 
RFCs. This will not permit non-ASCII art to be normative but will 
permit non-ASCII art to be _better_ descriptive in a first time. 
Experience will show if there are many such images. If there is a 
real need for normative non-ASCII art, it will provide experience to 
create a non-ASCII art IANA registry making sure they will survive, 
at an adeqate place.


jfc

At 21:00 05/01/2006, John C Klensin wrote:

No, I'm not saying that.  But the distinction I was trying to
make is pretty subtle.   The ASCII is the ASCII.  Normative
doesn't mean much for an I-D (see below for RFCs).  The rule
about PDF or Postscript versions is that they are supposed to be
equivalent to the ASCII (and vice versa).  But equivalent gets
a little subjective...

We know perfectly well that there are a few cases in which, no
matter what one does with ASCII art, it is not sufficient to
make whatever point is being made and supplemental text --more
description, in words, of what would be in the pictures-- will
not help much either.   Now, part of the point that the people
who have said if you can't do it in ASCII art, you generally
shouldn't be doing it -- use the ASCII art and write a better
description are making is that the cases in which we really
need fancy pictures are very few and that, except for those
cases, we are better off without them or at least being able to
treat them as strictly supplementary.

Before I go on, I continue to be fascinated by the observation
that, each time the we really need pictures and fancy
formatting and need them frequently argument comes up, the vast
majority of those who make it most strongly are people whose
contributions to the IETF -- in designer, editor, or other
leadership roles-- have been fairly minimal.  Now, of course,
some of them might argue that our current rules prevent them
from contributing and that, if only we would let them submit
documents written with the DeathRay word processor in Klingon
script, not only would their productivity rise, but everyone
else's would too --once we bought copies of DeathRay, learned
Klingon, and persuaded UTC to get the characters into Unicode.

However, that aside, assume that you are describing the new Mona
Lisa protocol, and that it is really impossible to adequately
describe the protocol without a high-resolution scale picture of
the Mona Lisa overlaid with your coordinate system.  The ASCII
form of your document could (and must under our current rules)
describe the coordinate system, include all of the measurements,
and describe what you are doing with them.  That text is
normative (and the important thing is the text, not whether it
is in ASCII or not) and has to be.  But it is going to be _very_
hard for anyone to understand your protocol without seeing the
picture unless they have a good mental image of it.

Under those conditions, our precedents are that you can probably
convince the WG/WGchairs/ADs, and eventually the RFC Editor,
that a PDF document containing a picture of the Mona Lisa and an
ASCII document with

  _-
  / \
  _   | o o |
  |  |  |
  | __  |
  _   | |
  \_/
  _
|   |  |  |

as a substitute for that picture, with the marginal lines
roughly identifying your grid marks and coordinate system, is
equivalent or as close to it as one can get.  I would expect
that to be a hard sell.  I, personally, would _want_ it to be a
hard sell.  If it is really necessary, folks will figure out how
to get the picture (maybe only the picture, which will probably
not change from one version of the I-D to the next) to those who
can't handle the PDF (or Postscript).  But we have done it
before, all of the needed rules and procedures are in place, and
nothing new is needed other than your understanding that you are
going to have to get consensus that the artwork is vital before
making that great a departure between the ASCII and the PDF
versions.

 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+ 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.

 ...and if it's not the pdf version of the text 

Re: ancients-moderns dispute (was: PDF, Postscript, and normative versions (was: Re: Baby Steps (was RE: Alternative formats for IDs)))

2006-01-06 Thread Bob Braden

  * 
  * Why not to just to proceed step by step and experiment? Let create an 
  * optional non-ascii art RFC-Editor repositories, for images quoted in 
  * RFCs. This will not permit non-ASCII art to be normative but will 
  * permit non-ASCII art to be _better_ descriptive in a first time. 
  * Experience will show if there are many such images. If there is a 
  * real need for normative non-ASCII art, it will provide experience to 
  * create a non-ASCII art IANA registry making sure they will survive, 
  * at an adeqate place.
  * 
  * jfc

This has been in place for many years, in the form of PS and/or
PDF versions of RFCs.  What am I missing?

Bob Braden


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Re: ancients-moderns dispute (was: PDF, Postscript, and normative versions (was: Re: Baby Steps (was RE: Alternative formats for IDs)))

2006-01-06 Thread JFC (Jefsey) Morfin

At 18:49 06/01/2006, Bob Braden wrote:


  *
  * Why not to just to proceed step by step and experiment? Let create an
  * optional non-ascii art RFC-Editor repositories, for images quoted in
  * RFCs. This will not permit non-ASCII art to be normative but will
  * permit non-ASCII art to be _better_ descriptive in a first time.
  * Experience will show if there are many such images. If there is a
  * real need for normative non-ASCII art, it will provide experience to
  * create a non-ASCII art IANA registry making sure they will survive,
  * at an adeqate place.
  *
  * jfc

This has been in place for many years, in the form of PS and/or
PDF versions of RFCs.  What am I missing?


I am not suggesting a repository of the RFC PDF version. But a 
repository of the _art_ attached to an ASCII version. So we first see 
if there is a real need through the usage made.

jfc


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