Kris is correct w.r.t. my original intent.

This applies to source code of any kind from any platform; and to a
large extent any Unix-style formats that are specially parsed but also
happen to be somewhat text readable. But trying to make a list defeats
the purpose. Better to always show the option, or make it an expert
feature that you can turn on and then it always shows the option.

Basically there are applications bound to extensions/types but in some
cases we want to look at the file very briefly rather than work in the
default application, and considering that Firefox already has a
perfectly good mechanism to display plain text files, it's a shame not
to simply give the user a faster route into that mode.

An argument could be made that an array of XML-based formats could be
given analogous treatment - i.e. when you click on a KML file instead of
running Google Earth you could have an option to "Render as plain XML".
But this isn't as needed I think, and in fact the plain text rendering
would often be sufficient for that as well. But it's something else to
think about. In this case you could offer that option only if the file
starts with "<?xml".

-- 
Option to display file in browser, treat as text/plain
https://launchpad.net/bugs/25830

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