Text files have a format only in the sense of encoding used (ASCII, UTF-8, EBCDIC etc.) and certainly in the case of ASCII there are platform specific conventions for end-of-line, which may variously be CR, CR+LF or LF for example.
A plain text file is just that - the C source code you are writing for this application is plain text for example, and you could load a plain text file into whatever editor you are using to edit code for example. The rendering of a plain-text file (font, text size, newline handling etc.) is not encoded in the file, it is entirely down to the application presenting the data (such as a text editor, or even the Windows/DOS "type" command).
There are structured formats based on plain-text such as XML, RTF and CSV for example. Details of these can be found at Wotsit.org. XML is good for complex data structures, RTF for formatted text and page presentation, and CSV for simple fixed format data records - especially numeric data. Any spreadsheet application for example will read CSV directly, placing each "value" in a separate cell. There are other text based mark-up formats such as JSON or even the Markdown format used by Stackoverflow.
The PIC18 is probably unsuited to building complex formats, you are better off perhaps passing simple raw data in a proprietary format and then processing that on a PC to transform it into whatever you need.