![]() ![]() As to character styles, such as italic, bold, or some colors (red, green, blue), etc., they will be tagged, and will be converted to corresponding rtf commands (controle words). In my system, I generate the font table and the stylesheet table for paragraph styles each paragraph of the text to be converted is tagged with the paragraph style name, so that all the paragraphs of the converted document will be governed by defined paragraph styles. ![]() After that comes the part containing data for the header and the footer. In the case of NWE's rtf files, the "rtf header" contains a "font table", defining all the fonts used in the document, a "color table" listing the colors used in the document, a "stylesheet table" listing different styles (paragraph styles and character styles) used in the document, and what is called "document formatting properties", specifying the attributes of the document such as margins and footer and header placement. I think the only application that should support all the rtf specs is the latest version of MS Word (for Windows?). The rtf format is a very flexible format, and may be different depending on applications. what can be called the data part, containing the data of the document. what can be called the rtf header, which defines the document as a whole Ģ. An rtf file consists mainly of two parts:ġ. The idea is to generate an rtf file from scratch. However, I think this system is worth being known widely, so people can customize it for their own personal use or extend it for a wider use. The use of this system is not very easy in the current state, some settings are for my personal use only (for example fonts, language setting, etc.), not common enough to be shared. This is why I developed another exporting method which will generate rtf files with style sheets from tagged Classic Nisus files. Using the rtf filter in exporting Classic Nisus files allows to achieve a better result, but still the styles are lost in the process. But the import of Classic Nisus files is buggy, and many font or style settings have to be corrected manually. Nevertheless, it has some good new features: especially it supports style sheets, and footnotes/endnotes. 2.x is still full of bugs, very unstable and very heavy when handling large documents (I write this in January 2005 NWE is at its version 2.1.1). 1/15/05.Ĭonvert Classic Nisus files to NWE files with styles Background Nisus Writer Express v. Convert Classic Nisus files to NWE files with styles Part of Nobumi Iyanaga's website. ![]()
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