Talk:Rich Text Format Directory

Latest comment: 1 year ago by GrahamN-UK in topic Microsoft Windows

Windows XP

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I'm not sure I understand the interest of this edit:

"On Windows XP, RTFD files are displayed as folders. editing these folders destroys the RTFD. this should be fixed in future versions of Microsoft Word, or may be an update for Word 2008, but the status is unknown at this time."

If someone can make it clearer and more interesting, I think that would be good. Mlewan (talk) 13:09, 13 November 2008 (UTC)Reply

GNUstep

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"In contrast to RTF, RTFD files cannot be opened by applications on Windows or other non Mac OS X operating systems, as this kind of bundle files currently only are supported on Mac OS X."

GNUstep (and, therefore, any applications written using GNUstep) has had the ability to open RTFD files for some years now. Applications capable of doing so run on both Windows and *NIX. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 82.7.192.45 (talk) 12:23, 11 January 2009 (UTC)Reply

"supports scalable high quality image formats like PDF"

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lolwut? PDF is a document format, not an image format. Perhaps SVF was ment? 173.14.75.181 (talk) 22:50, 13 December 2010 (UTC)Reply

Nope. PDF is meant. You can use it to store scalable images, and they display fine in rtfd. If you can find a better way to phrase it, feel free to change the text, but PDF is what is meant. Mlewan (talk) 10:15, 14 December 2010 (UTC)Reply

Article is currently NONSENSE

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At the moment, this article is garbage. Everything in the first paragraph is wrong -- it's basically saying that an .rtfd file is the same as a PDF. Whoever wrote this article was either drunk or a total ignoramus. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 72.93.49.65 (talk) 05:03, 23 April 2016 (UTC)Reply

hgo8 — Preceding unsigned comment added by 65.158.120.138 (talk) 04:11, 9 September 2016 (UTC)Reply

Bundles

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"In contrast to RTF, RTFD files cannot be opened properly by applications on Windows, which does not support the concept of bundles."

Saying that Windows cannot properly open RTFD files is not true. macOS has special API to make it convenient to treat a directory full of things as a bundle, and the Finder does a bit of hand waving to make it look and feel more like a regular document, but it really isn't that special. You can `ls` a bundle in macOS and it's just a directory. It doesn't require special support from the OS, and there's nothing stopping a Windows program from saying "Oh RTFD? that's a directory, look for a TXT.rtf inside and load the other assets" etc.

RyuKojiro (talk) 21:14, 6 July 2020 (UTC)Reply

Microsoft Windows

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In this section the article claims "In Microsoft Windows, RTFD files are displayed as folders." It doesn't in my copy of Windows 10. Saving an RTFD file to a folder results in Windows File Explorer treating it as a file, not a folder. GrahamN-UK (talk) 15:59, 14 March 2023 (UTC)Reply