Disks and partitions should be formatted before usage.
This is formatted text as it includes , italics, and font sizes. Can be stored in DOC's RTF's PDF's HTML ect.This is unformatted text. Usually stored in a TXT document.
HTML text isn't really formatted to begin with. But if you want to create text that is formatted in the exact way you typed it into the document, you can surround that text with a <PRE></PRE> element.
RAW is unformatted and unreadable so a floppy which is not formatted is in the raw format
a file can be anything, a document is a specifically formatted file containing text and/or pictures, etc. that is intended to be read using an appropriate application.
Paste will just paste whatever you've copied. Paste Special in Wordpad has a few options to paste in different formats which are as a Wordpad document, Rich Text Format, a picture and unformatted text. It is much more limited in options compared to Paste Special in other applications.
In simple terms, unformatted input and output is the most primitive form of input and output. It typically offers the most compact storage but is generally less portable than formatted input and output. If we consider the decimal value 1.23, there are various ways we can output this value. We might choose to use unformatted output using IEEE 754 encoding, creating the 4-byte binary value 0x3f9d70a4. However, in order to input this value upon another system, we must first tell that other system to expect an IEEE 754 value otherwise the binary value could be interpreted as being the integer value 1,067,282,596 or the character sequence "? p ¤ " or something else entirely. With formatted input and output, instead of the value 1.23 we output the null-terminated string "1.23", thus creating the 5-byte binary value 0x312e323300. When we come to input that value, the system does not need to know the specifics of the encoding, it simply needs to know that the input is formatted. Thus we read back the string "1.23", which can then be converted to the floating point value 1.23 using whatever encoding the system actually supports. Humans typically input data in formatted form using character sequences. So when entering the value 1.23 from the keyboard, we generate the string "1.23". If the system knows that it is expecting a floating point value, then it will attempt to convert the string accordingly, creating unformatted data from the formatted input. Similarly, when the computer presents the unformatted value 1.23 as output to the user, it is converted back to a string creating formatted output from the unformatted data. When we create formatted output from unformatted output, we can also choose to decorate the output, such that the unformatted value 1.23 might be represented as the formatted value "£1.23" if the value happens to represent a UK currency value. Similarly, we can do a reverse conversion when the user inputs the formatted value "£1.23".
document template
Template
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A table can do this.