Ask Slashdot: What Is the Best Open Document Format?
kramer2718 writes: I am working on a project that requires uploading and storing of documents. Although the application will need to allow uploading of .docx, doc, .pdf, etc, I'd like to store the documents in a standard open format that will allow easy search, compression, rendering, etc. Which open document format is the best?
Since "best" can be highly driven by circumstances, please explain your reasoning, too.
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.txt. If you need pretty formatting, fill it Latex tags.
Or store both the original, and a standardized format. The place I work stores everything from engineering drawings, meeting minutes, purchase records, to manuals of old equipment in a central document library. It retains the original file, and makes a pdf of every file, and a link to both is listed in each entry. We've already had some older CAD formats no longer supported by current software we have easy access to, but the old pdfs are still readable and it is cheap enough to find some intern to re-create the document from the pdf if need be.
Or store both the original, and a standardized format. The place I work stores everything from engineering drawings, meeting minutes, purchase records, to manuals of old equipment in a central document library. It retains the original file, and makes a pdf of every file, and a link to both is listed in each entry.
THIS.
PDFs (or some similar standard) will ensure that the original documents can be read by everyone and viewed with the original formatting intended by the person creating them. Any differences in the version of Word or whatever is going to tweak the formatting in unpredictable ways.
But the originals should always be retained, since it may make future editing easier. And people also won't be stuck trying to undo whatever unpredictable reformatting or editing (e.g., loss of certain features moving between formats) might go on in your conversion process.