posted
I looked in the Hatrack FAQs but found no guidance on what file format to use if someone requests to see more of a work. My guesses in order of preference: .pdf .doc .rtf .txt .swx (but why not .doc?)
Posts: 746 | Registered: Jun 2007
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posted
Usually rtf safe, so is doc, sometimes, and word works. I usually send a rtf one and a word one.
Posts: 98 | Registered: Mar 2006
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posted
I can't speak for other people, but I loath .pdf format. The files are large, notes can't be inserted easily, it generally requires special software to view (and even more to insert notes). Unless specifically asked for, I would recommend shying away from it.
Posts: 49 | Registered: Jul 2007
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posted
Because I used to do technical support for Word, I usually work with that since I know it inside and out. For sending things out, I try to remember to convert to RTF, but I usually forget.
Posts: 696 | Registered: Sep 2005
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posted
I used to send stuff in PDF until people told me they hated it. It's cross-platform and all that, but it's not good for inserting comments inline. Now I use Word unless I'm told otherwise, and everything I've ever been asked to critique has been sent to me in Word or RTF.
Posts: 671 | Registered: May 2006
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posted
Here's another vote against .PDF because you need special, expensive software to insert comments. I like to put comments in the text right at the places they apply.
.DOC and .RTF both work with MS Word. RTF works with other editors like WordPad that I have to use occasionally. Many submission guides call for .RTF.
My order of preference:
DOC RTF TXT - including embedding in the body of email
posted
Hmm. I guess it would be a good idea to put something like that in the FAQs.
I'd recommend ASCII text or RTF format if the writer and the potential critiquer don't have the same word processing software, but if they both have MS Word, then it's fine to stay with that. MS Word's tracking feature is a pretty cool way to do critiques.
posted
I send everything in rtf. The problem with .doc files is that they can contain viruses. rtf is generally seen as safer, and in MS word, it look sjust like a .doc file.
Posts: 2 | Registered: Aug 2010
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posted
Well, the one time I passed something around 'round here (so far), I just pasted it on the bottom of the e-mail. (It was short.)
When I used to hang around this Internet Fan Fiction community, we generally passed our work around in HTML format, as attached files to our e-mails. I don't know how suitable that would be here, or whether there are any inherent problems with this format. (My main beef with it was that it eliminated all paragraph indentations, and I wasn't savvy enough to figure out to put them in.)
.pdf format, when I've used it, always produces a bunch of weird typos, and I have to go over the new file to eliminate them.
posted
I really prefer .doc. Most people have MS Word. I have a Mac and have MS Word on it. And if you don't have Word, your PC will read it with Wordpad (or whatever its called).
When it comes to submissions, they'll usually tell you if they prefer .doc or .rtf. No one wants Apple's word processor, one of the reasons I bought Word for Mac.
quote:I send everything in rtf. The problem with .doc files is that they can contain viruses. rtf is generally seen as safer, and in MS word, it look sjust like a .doc file.
You can, and should, disable the macros to prevent that. Macros are the only way virus-like behavior can infect word files most of the time. The exception is the ones that can infect any file, but I think those are usually easier for antivirus software to detect.
Macros themselves are usually pretty easy to detect, too. If you scan the file first, or your email does, you shouldn't have many problems. If you're in doubt, right-click (Windows) the file and instruct it to open with Notepad or Wordpad.
posted
Oh, I thought we were talking about sending manuscripts to other Hatrackers for critiques, not to Online Magazines. You should definitely send a publisher whatever format they request.
Posts: 696 | Registered: Sep 2005
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posted
all the online submits I've been doing request that the text be pasted into the body of the email (granted, it's all query stuff, so it's pretty short) but, man, I hate how it looks.
Posts: 1304 | Registered: May 2007
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