M. Gahrns Microsoft Internet Draft T. Hain Document: draft-hain-msword-template-06.txt Cisco Expires: January 2002 July 2001 Using Microsoft Word to create Internet Drafts and RFC's Status of this Memo This document is an Internet-Draft and is in full conformance with all provisions of Section 10 of RFC2026. Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF), its areas, and its working groups. Note that other groups may also distribute working documents as Internet- Drafts. Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any time. It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as reference material or to cite them other than as "work in progress." The list of current Internet-Drafts can be accessed at http://www.ietf.org/ietf/1id-abstracts.txt The list of Internet-Draft Shadow Directories can be accessed at http://www.ietf.org/shadow.html. Abstract This document will describe the steps to configure the Microsoft Word application to produce documents in Internet Draft and RFC format. Table of Contents Status of this Memo................................................1 Abstract...........................................................1 Overview...........................................................2 Conventions used in this document..................................2 Instructions for producing Internet drafts and RFCs................2 Defining Microsoft Word Page Layout and Styles.....................3 Positioning the document identifiers on the first page.............5 Automatic date.....................................................6 Automatic reference numbering......................................7 Formal Syntax.....................................................12 Security Considerations...........................................12 References........................................................13 Author's Addresses................................................13 Hain Expires - January 2002 [Page 1] Using Microsoft Word to create July 2001 Internet Drafts and RFC's Overview This document describes the steps to create a Microsoft Word 97 or later template to assist those producing Internet drafts. The resulting configuration allows for simple WYSIWYG editing of drafts and RFCs while producing output that is in accordance with IETF draft and RFC submission specifications. (72 Characters per line, 58 lines per page, each line terminated by a CRLF, and each page followed by a LF, etc.) Using Word's text justification and table capabilities may facilitate creating ASCII stick drawings. While the authors happen to have been employed by Microsoft during much of this document's evolution, it is not a product of Microsoft and is unsupported. Included is a detailed description of how the RFC Text and RFC Heading styles are defined. This should prove useful to those wishing to do further customization work or create a similar template for other versions of Microsoft Word. It also includes a description and the source of the CRLF.EXE program that is used to create the final text file output. Feedback about this program is consistent with the fact that each version of Windows has a slightly different Generic Printer driver. Since this document will not be kept current with every Windows revision, the code sample is provided as a basis for personal customizations. A copy of the template in RTF format and the CRLF.EXE program, can be found at ftp://ftp.ietf.org/internet-drafts Conventions used in this document In this document the steps for walking a pull-down tree are indented on subsequent lines. This allows abbreviation rather than a barrage of 'then click' or 'select' strings in a paragraph form. Example: Help About Microsoft Word Instructions for producing Internet drafts and RFCs 1) The "auto-formatting" Microsoft Word does can result in some undesired characters when creating the IETF standardized format. (E.g. it will insert special characters for quotation marks, add special formatting when creating lists, etc.) To avoid this, turn off "auto formatting" Tools Autocorrect On the property pages 'AutoFormat' and 'AutoFormat As You Type', turn off all of the auto formatting options. If you forget, or frequently switch between IETF format and not, typing a ^Z after each auto-format event will undo the formatting change. This of course requires awareness of the event. Hain Expires - January 2002 [Page 2] Using Microsoft Word to create July 2001 Internet Drafts and RFC's 2) Two special styles need to be defined: RFC Heading and RFC Text. If you choose automatic reference numbering or table of contents (defined below), the style for Endnote Reference, Endnote Text, and TOC need to be modified. The entire draft must be written using these styles for the spacing to come out correctly. *** Do not use bold, underlining, italics, etc., or you will lose the WYSIWYG editing feature since these settings affect the number of characters that can occur on a line. When the resulting Internet draft is saved as plain text, all that formatting will be lost anyway. *** 3) Print the document to the Generic Text Printer, and save the output to file. If you do not have the Generic Text Printer driver installed, install it from the Control Panel. (Printers, Add Printer, local/My Computer, any LPT port (you will be printing to a file), select Generic, Generic/Text Only from the combo box). When you print to a file a pop-up will ask for the file name. 4) Run the CRLF program to automatically add carriage returns. Usage is CRLF Where is the name of the file produced by printing to the generic text printer, and is the name of the text draft you are producing. Example: crlf draft-00.prn draft-00.txt Defining Microsoft Word Page Layout and Styles These are settings used to define the RFC Text and RFC Heading styles. Note: the menu options to set these are enclosed in parenthesis and are listed for Microsoft Word 97. They may differ slightly for other versions of Microsoft Word. 1) Set measurement units to points. Tools Options General Measurement units = points 2) Set margins as follows: (File, Page Setup, Margins) Top: 24 pts Bottom: 0 pts Left: 36 pts Right: 57.6 pts Gutter: 0 pts Header: 0 pts Footer: 0 pts The right margin is what determines 72 characters per line. Using 12 pt font, 10 chars/inch, 72 chars = 7.2". Using paper that is 8.5" wide. 8.5" - 7.2" = 1.3" = 93.6 pts If you get "one or more margins are outside the printable area" message, select Ignore. This seems to depend on the printer you currently have selected. Hain Expires - January 2002 [Page 3] Using Microsoft Word to create July 2001 Internet Drafts and RFC's While early versions of this document set the left and right margins to 0 and 93.6, there were reports that this frequently cut off characters on the left. Shifting the text right results in the margins given here. In some cases these values produce leading spaces, which doesn't affect the appearance, but makes the file larger than necessary. Adjustment of the margins for any specific combination of Windows & Word will have to be locally appropriate; just make sure to move both in equal increments. 3) Set paper size as follows: File Page Setup Paper Size Width: 612 pt (8.5") Height: 696 pt (12pt * 58 lines per page) The height of the paper is what determines 58 lines per page. 4) Set headers/footers to be different for the first page. File Page Setup Layout 5) Define a RFC Heading Style. Format Style New RFC Heading: Heading1 + Font: Courier New, 12pt, Not Bold, Line spacing exactly 12pt., Space before 0 pt after 0 pt, Level 1 NOTE: Line Spacing Exactly 12pt is very important. Set this through Format: Paragraph Additional Heading levels can be defined by repeating this step and incrementing the Level #. If Numbered Headings are desired: Format Bullets and Numbering Outline Numbered Select preferred style Customize More Link level to style RFC Heading 6) Define a RFC Text Style. Format Style New RFC Text: Normal+Font: Courier New, 12pt, Indent: Left 21.6pt, Line Spacing Exactly 12 pt. Line Spacing and indent are set through Format, Paragraph. This leaves a 3 character left indent for the RFC text 7) Fix the Header Style. Format Hain Expires - January 2002 [Page 4] Using Microsoft Word to create July 2001 Internet Drafts and RFC's Style Header Header: Normal+Font: Courier New, 12pt, Line Spacing Exactly 12 pt, Clear the tabs previously defined, and add Tabs 252 pt Centered, 504 pt Right Flush 8) Fix the Footer Style. Format Style Footer Footer: Normal+Font: Courier New, 12pt, Line Spacing Exactly 12 pt, Tabs 252 pt Centered, 504 pt Right Flush 9) Define your headers and footers for the first page. View Headers (on first page) Header: No Header Footer: Carriage Return AuthorName [Page ] 10) Define subsequent headers and footers. View Headers (on second page) Header: Title Month, Year Footer: Carriage Return AuthorName Expiration [Page ] 11) Fix the Table-of-contents Styles. Repeat for each level. Format Style TOC1 TOC1: RFC text +, Automatically update TOC2: RFC text + Indent: Left 12pt, Automatically update TOC3: RFC text + Indent: Left 24pt, Automatically update Positioning the document identifiers on the first page The 'Table' tool can be used to assist with justification of the document identifiers on the first page. Each cell in the table maintains its own justification characteristics, so getting left and right justification on the same line is simplified. On the Toolbar select the icon that looks like a grid with a dark bar across the top. This will pop-up a table array. Drag the mouse across to select the number of rows and columns (for the opening header 4 rows x 2 columns, unless there are several authors). Select the table that was just inserted by click-and-hold in the left margin, and then clear the boarders. Format Borders and Shading None Select the cells on the right (position the cursor just above the top cell, when the cursor becomes an arrow pointing down, click) and Hain Expires - January 2002 [Page 5] Using Microsoft Word to create July 2001 Internet Drafts and RFC's set justification right. (The default is to take justification from the line it is being positioned on, so the left column shouldn't need changing.) Format Paragraph Right Move the center divider to the right if necessary for the document title. Select the left column of cells, then position the cursor over the dividing line. When it changes to parallel bars with right/left arrows, click-and-hold, then drag the line as necessary. Automatic date For those who frequently update drafts, and find they occasionally forget to update the current save and expire dates, there is a way to automate those fields. While it is rather complex to set up the expire-month field, it only needs to be done once in a template file, and all future drafts benefit. To automatically set the current date on save, select the lower right cell in the table created above, and insert the save date. Insert Field Date and Time SaveDate In the box below the sample "field codes", modify as necessary to make it look like: - SAVEDATE \@ "MMMM YYYY" û (between the û's). OK The field will have a gray background on the screen, but will not affect the printed version. Double click on the field, copy, and then replace the Month, Year in the header (10 in Layout Styles above) with a paste. Setting up the expire-date is similar, but requires inserting nested fields. Select the location for the month then insert an IF field. Insert Field MailMerge IF OK This will result in an error. Right click on the error message, and select Toggle Field Codes. This will allow further editing. Select the space after the initial IF, then insert another field: SaveDate (as above but this time only the month digit is used "M"). Right click on the number it inserts and Toggle Field Codes again. Follow the right brace } with =, then the month to test, followed by the month name 6 months later. At this point loop and insert another IF, until all 12 are done. Follow the last one with a "" to complete the syntax. The resulting expanded filed code will look like: Hain Expires - January 2002 [Page 6] Using Microsoft Word to create July 2001 Internet Drafts and RFC's { IF { SAVEDATE \@ "M" \* MERGEFORMAT } = 1 July { IF { SAVEDATE \@ "M" \* MERGEFORMAT } = 2 August { IF { SAVEDATE \@ "M" \* MERGEFORMAT } = 3 September { IF { SAVEDATE \@ "M" \* MERGEFORMAT } = 4 October { IF { SAVEDATE \@ "M" \* MERGEFORMAT } = 5 November { IF { SAVEDATE \@ "M" \* MERGEFORMAT } = 6 December { IF { SAVEDATE \@ "M" \* MERGEFORMAT } = 7 January { IF { SAVEDATE \@ "M" \* MERGEFORMAT } = 8 February { IF { SAVEDATE \@ "M" \* MERGEFORMAT } = 9 March { IF { SAVEDATE \@ "M" \* MERGEFORMAT } = 10 April { IF { SAVEDATE \@ "M" \* MERGEFORMAT } = 11 May { IF { SAVEDATE \@ "M" \* MERGEFORMAT } = 12 June "" \* MERGEFORMAT } \* MERGEFORMAT } \* MERGEFORMAT } \* MERGEFORMAT } \* MERGEFORMAT } \* MERGEFORMAT } \* MERGEFORMAT } \* MERGEFORMAT } \* MERGEFORMAT } \* MERGEFORMAT } \* MERGEFORMAT } \* MERGEFORMAT } Space over and set the expire-year with a field in a similar manner. This time there are only 2 IF fields, comparing halves of the year. The printed value on true will be the SaveDate year value and the expanded result will look like: { IF { SAVEDATE \@ "M" \* MERGEFORMAT } < 7 { SAVEDATE \@ "YYYY" \* MERGEFORMAT } { IF { SAVEDATE \@ "M" \* MERGEFORMAT } > 6 { = { SAVEDATE \@ "YYYY" \* MERGEFORMAT } + 1 \*MERGEFORMAT } "" \* MERGEFORMAT } Revert the field codes to normal text by right click, Toggle Field Codes or Update Field. Select both of these fields by clicking on one then shift click on the other. Copy, then paste in the footer (9 & 10 in Layout Styles above) replacing the Month, Year. Automatic reference numbering To support automatic updates of reference numbers, make the following changes. (Requires the document to be a single section prior to the Reference heading.) 1) Insert a section break on the line after Reference heading. Insert Break Section Break Continuous 2) Format the style of the Endnote References and Text. Format Style Endnote reference Modify Based on 'underlying paragraph' Format Font clear the check box for 'superscript' Endnote text Modify Based on 'RFC text' Format Paragraph Indentation Hain Expires - January 2002 [Page 7] Using Microsoft Word to create July 2001 Internet Drafts and RFC's Left .3 Special Hanging .3 3) Set up the location of the references, and number style. Insert Footnote Endnote Autonumber Options Place at 'End of section' Numeric style '1,2,3' 4) Select the location for the first reference. Between the user typed [ ] characters insert an endnote. Insert Footnote (endnote will already be selected, as will auto 1,2,3) OK When the endnote is inserted the lower pane will appear. Type in the text describing the reference. The first time a reference is inserted the Endnote Separator should be cleared (the continuation separator may need it as well). Find the pull down just above the reference text, and change it to each of the options to make sure all but the 'All Endnotes' are cleared. Endnote Separator Select and delete any text The reference number in the text and the endnote table will automatically track as changes are made. If the endnote window is closed and changes need to be made, select View Footnotes To add automatically updated cross-references for previous footnotes, select the location of the cross-reference. Between the user typed [ ] characters insert a cross-reference. Insert Cross-reference Select reference type 'endnote' Clear the checkbox for 'Insert as hyperlink' Select the reference from the endnote list Insert Hain Expires - January 2002 [Page 8] Using Microsoft Word to create July 2001 Internet Drafts and RFC's Final fixup: the CRLF program Each line needs to be terminated by a CRLF, but when printing your document to the Generic Text Printer driver, some blank lines will be terminated only with a line feed. Consider a traditional text line printer, printing a line of text, followed by 3 blank lines. The output would look as follows: Line of Text. This was done because there was no need to move the print carriage head for the blank lines, only line feeds were necessary. CRLF.EXE is a Win16/32 program to fix up the output from the various versions of the Generic Text Printer driver so that each line is terminated by a CRLF. An extra line that makes the first page be 59 lines, instead of the required 58 is also removed. Following example provides source for a CRLF fixup program. /*************************************************************** * CRLF.C - Sample source code to format documents produced by * the MS Word IETF template so that they comply to IETF draft * and RFC guidelines ****************************************************************/ #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #define CR 13 #define LF 10 #define FF 12 #define TRUE 1 #define FALSE 0 typedef int BOOL; int main(int argc, char *argv[]) { int fSrc, fDest; int iNumBytesRead; char cr = CR; char lf = LF; char ff = FF; unsigned char buff[3]; BOOL bPrecedingCR = FALSE; BOOL FirstCol = TRUE; if(argc != 3) Hain Expires - January 2002 [Page 9] Using Microsoft Word to create July 2001 Internet Drafts and RFC's { printf("Usage:\n\n"); printf(" crlf \n\n"); return 0; } fSrc = _open(argv[1], _O_RDONLY | _O_BINARY); fDest = _open(argv[2], _O_CREAT | _O_RDWR | _O_BINARY | _O_TRUNC, _S_IREAD | _S_IWRITE); if(fSrc == -1) { printf("Could not open file (%s) for reading.\n", argv[1]); printf( strerror(errno)); return 0; } if(fDest == -1) { printf("Count not open file (%s) for writing.\n", argv[2]); printf( strerror(errno)); return 0; } // Using the MS Word with the generic text printer, an extra // CR LF starts the file. Skip over these first 2 bytes, // otherwise the first page will have 59 lines instead of 58 iNumBytesRead = _read(fSrc, buff, 2); // Prepare to parse through the file iNumBytesRead = _read(fSrc, buff, 1); while(iNumBytesRead > 0) { if (buff[0] == LF && bPrecedingCR == FALSE) { // Found a LF without a preceding CR // Inject a CR to precede the LF if (FirstCol == TRUE) { //only write CR if in the first col _write(fDest, &cr, 1); _write(fDest, &(buff[0]), 1); } else { //ignore the random LF } } else if ( buff[0] == CR ) { // Track whether we will have a preceding // CR for the next byte we read Hain Expires - January 2002 [Page 10] Using Microsoft Word to create July 2001 Internet Drafts and RFC's bPrecedingCR = TRUE; FirstCol = TRUE; _write(fDest, &(buff[0]), 1); } else { bPrecedingCR = FALSE; FirstCol = FALSE; _write(fDest, &(buff[0]), 1); } // Read next byte iNumBytesRead = _read(fSrc, &buff[0], 1); } _close(fSrc); _close(fDest); return 0; } Hain Expires - January 2002 [Page 11] Using Microsoft Word to create July 2001 Internet Drafts and RFC's Known problems Printing If you try to print the draft you are working on from within Microsoft Word to an actual printer (not to a file using the Generic Text printer driver), you may receive an error message indicating the margins are outside of the printable area of the printer. If you continue printing, the first 2 characters of each heading will be truncated. It is recommended you produce a printed copy of the draft you are working on by using the CRLF program to produce a text file, and then redirect it to a printer (so that you do not need to deal with other programs like NOTEPAD, etc. adding their own margins.) Example: - Print to a file using the generic text printer - CRLF draft.prn draft.txt - NET USE lpt1 <\\printername\sharename> - TYPE draft.txt > LPT1 As an alternative, if the final draft.txt file is opened with Word, setting all 4 margins to .65" will position it on the page. File Page Setup Top .65 Bottom .65 Left .65 Right .65 The Underscore character If you use the underscore character "_" within the RFC Text and RFC Heading style, it will not be displayed on most screens. (It appears as a blank space.) It will print correctly and will appear as an underscore character in the final draft output. Formal Syntax The formal definition of RFC format is defined in RFC-2223 [1] and Internet Draft instructions are available at [2]. Security Considerations Caution is advised when opening any document that may contain a macro virus. The template files originally provided to the Internet- drafts & RFC editors did not contain any macros, and unless tampered with should not now. If there are concerns about using the template doc file, the instructions provided here will allow creation of one from scratch. Further details about Microsoft Word macro virus concerns are available at: http://www.microsoft.com/ . To find the current documents, search for 'macro virus'. Hain Expires - January 2002 [Page 12] Using Microsoft Word to create July 2001 Internet Drafts and RFC's References 1 RFC 2223 J. Postel, J. Reynolds, "Instructions to RFC Authors", RFC 2223, October 1997 2 http://www.ietf.org/ietf/1id-guidelines.txt Author's Addresses Mike Gahrns Microsoft One Microsoft Way Phone: 1-425-936-9833 Redmond, Wa. USA Email: mikega@microsoft.com Tony Hain Cisco 500 108th Ave Phone: 1-425-468-1061 Bellevue, Wa. USA Email: ahain@cisco.com Hain Expires - January 2002 [Page 13]