In Word we can easily save edited documents in a variety of formats, but there are four types of text files in Word to choose from, so what is the difference between them?
1. Plain text file format
Plain text files, only the text is saved, and its formatting is not saved. Converts all section breaks, page breaks, and new line characters to paragraph marks. Set with ANSI characters. Select this format only if the target program cannot read any other valid file formats.
2. MS-DOS Plain text
Converts files in the same way as plain text. Using extended ASCII character settings, it is the standard for an MS-DOS based program. Use this format to share documents between Word and a program that is not based on Windows.
3, with branch Fu Chun text and MS-DOS band branch Fu Chun text
Saves the text without saving its formatting. Converts all line breaks, section breaks, and page breaks to paragraph marks. Use this format when you want to keep line breaks (for example, when you want to transfer a document to an e-mail system).
4, formatted text and MS-DOS formatted text
Keep line breaks. Inserts spaces in the converted document to approximate indents, tables, line spacing, paragraph spacing, and tab stops. Converts a section break and a page break to a bit paragraph mark. Use this format to convert a document to a bit text format while preserving page layout.
Knowing the above reason, we can according to their own needs to be free to set the