ASCII mode in FTP refers to the standardized transfer format, not necessarily the final storage format. And the conversion is not always just about line endings. EBCDIC systems would perform conversions from and to the EBCDIC character set.
It works like this:
The sender converts data from its internal format to a 8-bit ASCII format.
Line endings are standardized to CRLF during transfer.
The receiver then converts the data from this standardized format to its own internal format.
So the end result might not be conversion at all when transferring files from one system to another. And there could also be a conversion from or to the EBCDIC character set for example.
Keep your hands off that name. That's what it's called in FTP and everyone who knows it, knows what it means. Don't change it under any circumstances. Don't keep distroying the TC. If you have no idea about a topic, you should not say anything. And if you have no idea about something, you'd better not use it (or search the internet before using (and that is exactly the reason why it must continue to be called exactly that in the Tc)).
Moderator message from: white » 2025-01-17, 11:22 UTC
JOUBE wrote: 2025-01-17, 09:38 UTC
Keep your hands off that name. That's what it's called in FTP and everyone who knows it, knows what it means. Don't change it under any circumstances. Don't keep distroying the TC. If you have no idea about a topic, you should not say anything. And if you have no idea about something, you'd better not use it (or search the internet before using (and that is exactly the reason why it must continue to be called exactly that in the Tc)).