That is correct.
Word files include data about the formatting of the text (font, color, size, centered, margins, etc.). Notepad files (usually .txt) are plain text files--no formatting, just text.
Plain text has only the text of the document, without any formatting. "Rich text" also includes information about the document formatting, such as font, size, bold, italics, margins and so-on. Most word processing programs these days will read "RTF" - Rich Text Format - and format the document for you.
It is a plain text file, just text, no graphics, no formatting, no colours or anything like that. It is just for when the text is important, not how it looks. Web pages and programs and data are often in plain text files. Applications like Notepad are used to create text files.
The list of file formats that support text formatting would most likely number in the thousands or even tens of thousands. Common examples of file types that support text formatting include RTF, HTML, Microsoft Word's DOC, PostScript, LaTeX, PDF, and Microsoft PowerPoint. In general, any format that supports rendering text to a screen or printer supports text formatting, except for classic file formats, such as TXT (text) files.
An RSS feed is a plain text file. There's no conversion necessary.
The file is just a plain text file. Txt is an abbreviation for text.
TXT files are plain text files. They are very basic documents with minimal formatting. They can be opened and edited with notepad, wordpad, or any other word processor application.
Yes, it is a plain text file.
txt stands for Text. It is often used by plain text editors as the suffix to the file name. There is no formatting associated with most txt files. You should be able to open them with a word processor, notepad or wordpad on your computer.
it's called my bytch suck dyck
That the text has no formatting, and so it's easier, for example, to copy on a html page
That the text has no formatting, and so it's easier, for example, to copy on a html page