Network Working Group                                             F. Lee
Request for Comments: 1843                           Stanford University
Category: Informational                                      August 1995


              HZ - A Data Format for Exchanging Files of
            Arbitrarily Mixed Chinese and ASCII characters

Status of this Memo

  This memo provides information for the Internet community.  This memo
  does not specify an Internet standard of any kind.  Distribution of
  this memo is unlimited.

Abstract

  The content of this memo is identical to an article of the same title
  written by the author on September 4, 1989.  In this memo, GB stands
  for GB2312-80.  Note that the title is kept only for historical
  reasons.  HZ has been widely used for purposes other than "file
  exchange".

1. Introduction

  Most existing computer systems which can handle a text file of
  arbitrarily mixed Chinese and ASCII characters use 8-bit codes.  To
  exchange such text files through electronic mail on ASCII computer
  systems, it is necessary to encode them in a 7-bit format.  A generic
  binary to ASCII encoder is not sufficient, because there is currently
  no universal standard for such 8-bit codes. For example, CCDOS and
  Macintosh's Chinese OS use different internal codes.  Fortunately,
  there is a PRC national standard, GuoBiao (GB), for the encoding of
  Chinese characters, and Chinese characters encoded in the above
  systems can be easily converted to GB by a simple formula. (* The ROC
  standard BIG-5 is outside the scope of this article.)

  HZ is a 7-bit data format proposed for arbitrarily mixed GB and ASCII
  text file exchange.  HZ is also intended for the design of terminal
  emulators that display and edit mixed Chinese and ASCII text files in
  real time.











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RFC 1843        HZ - A Data Format for Exchanging Files      August 1995


2. Specification

  The format of HZ is described in the following.

  Without loss of generality, we assume that all Chinese characters
  (HanZi) have already been encoded in GB.  A GB (GB1 and GB2) code is
  a two byte code, where the first byte is in the range $21-$77
  (hexadecimal), and the second byte is in the range $21-$7E.

  A graphical ASCII character is a byte in the range $21-$7E. A non-
  graphical ASCII character is a byte in the range $0-$20 or of the
  value $7F.

  Since the range of a graphical ASCII character overlaps that of a GB
  byte, a byte in the range $21-$7E is interpreted according to the
  mode it is in.  There are two modes, namely ASCII mode and GB mode.

  By convention, a non-graphical ASCII character should only appear in
  ASCII mode.

  The default mode is ASCII mode.

  In ASCII mode, a byte is interpreted as an ASCII character, unless a
  '~' is encountered. The character '~' is an escape character. By
  convention, it must be immediately followed ONLY by '~', '{' or '\n'
  (<LF>), with the following special meaning.

  o The escape sequence '~~' is interpreted as a '~'.
  o The escape-to-GB sequence '~{' switches the mode from ASCII to
    GB.
  o The escape sequence '~\n' is a line-continuation marker to be
    consumed with no output produced.

  In GB mode, characters are interpreted two bytes at a time as (pure)
  GB codes until the escape-from-GB code '~}' is read. This code
  switches the mode from GB back to ASCII.  (Note that the escape-
  from-GB code '~}' ($7E7D) is outside the defined GB range.)

  The decoding process is clear from the above description.

  The encoding process is straightforward. Note that an (ASCII) '~' is
  always encoded as '~~'. A sequence of GB codes is enclosed in '~{'
  and '~}'.








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RFC 1843        HZ - A Data Format for Exchanging Files      August 1995


3. Remarks & Recommendations

  We choose to encode any ASCII character except '~' as it is, rather
  than as a two byte code, and we choose ASCII as the default mode for
  the following reasons. The computer systems we use is ASCII based.  A
  HZ file containing pure ASCII characters (i.e. no Chinese characters)
  except '~' is precisely a pure ASCII file. In general, the English
  (ASCII) portion of a HZ file is directly readable.

  The escape character '~' is chosen not only because it is commonly
  used in the ASCII world, but also because '~' ($7E) is outside the
  defined range ($21-$77) of the first byte of a GB code.

  In ASCII mode, other potential escape sequences, i.e., two byte
  sequences beginning with '~' (other than '~~', '~{', '~\n') are
  currently invalid HZ sequences. Hence, they can be used for future
  extension of HZ with total upward compatibility.

  The line-continuation marker '~\n' is useful if one wants to encode
  long lines in the original text into short lines in this data format
  without introducing extra newline characters in the decoding process.

  There is no limit on the length of a line. In fact, the whole file
  could be one long line or even contain no newline characters. Any
  DECODER of this HZ data format should not and has no need to operate
  on the concept of a line.

  It is easy to write encoders and decoders for HZ. An encoder or
  decoder needs to lookahead at most one character in the input data
  stream.

  Given the current mode, it is also possible and easy to decode a HZ
  data stream by scanning backward. One of the implication is that
  "backspaces" can be handled correctly by a terminal emulator.

  To facilitate the effective use of programs supporting line/page
  skips such as "more" on UNIX with a terminal emulator understanding
  the HZ format, it is RECOMMENDED that the ENCODER (which outputs in
  HZ) sets a maximum line size of less than 80 characters.  Since '\n'
  is an ASCII character, the syntax of HZ then automatically implies
  that GB codes appearing at the end of a line must be terminated with
  the escape-from-GB code '~}', and the line-continuation marker '~\n'
  should be inserted appropriately. The price to paid is that the
  encoded file size is slightly larger.

  It is important to understand the following distinction.  Note that
  the above recommendation does NOT change the HZ format.  It is simply
  an encoding "style" which follows the syntax of HZ. Note that this



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RFC 1843        HZ - A Data Format for Exchanging Files      August 1995


  "style" is not built into HZ. It is an additional convention built
  "on top of" HZ.  Other applications may require different "styles",
  but the same basic HZ DECODER will always work. The essence of HZ is
  to provide such a flexible basic data format for files of arbitrarily
  mixed Chinese and ASCII characters.

4. Examples

  To illustrate the "stylistic" issue of HZ encoding, we give the
  following four examples of encoded text, which should produce the
  same decoded output. (The recommendation in the last section refers
  to Example 2.)

  Example 1:  (Suppose there is no line size limit.)
  This sentence is in ASCII.
  The next sentence is in GB.~{<:Ky2;S{#,NpJ)l6HK!#~}Bye.

  Example 2:  (Suppose the maximum line size is 42.)
  This sentence is in ASCII.
  The next sentence is in GB.~{<:Ky2;S{#,~}~
  ~{NpJ)l6HK!#~}Bye.

  Example 3: (Suppose a new line is started whenever there is a mode
             switch.)
  This sentence is in ASCII.
  The next sentence is in GB.~
  ~{<:Ky2;S{#,NpJ)l6HK!#~}~
  Bye.

Acknowledgement

  Edmund Lai was the first one who brought my attention to this topic.
  Discussions with Ed, Tin-Fook Ngai, Yagui Wei and Ricky Yeung were
  very helpful in shaping the ideas in this article. Thanks to Tin-Fook
  for his careful review of the draft and numerous interesting
  suggestions.

References

  [1] Fung Fung Lee, "HZ - A Data Format for Exchanging Files of
      Arbitrarily Mixed Chinese and ASCII Characters," September 4,
      1989.
      As part of //ftp.ifcss.org/software/unix/convert/HZ-2.0.tar.gz

Security Considerations

  Security issues are not addressed in this memo.




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RFC 1843        HZ - A Data Format for Exchanging Files      August 1995


Author's Address

  Fung Fung Lee
  Computer Systems Laboratory
  Stanford University
  Stanford, CA 94309

  Phone: +1 415 723 1450
  EMail: [email protected]










































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