home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- From: sommar@enea.UUCP (Erland Sommarskog) (in Stockholm)
-
- * ISO-Latin/1 *
-
- The byte value is in the document represented by a notation
- xx/yy, where xx is the upper nibble (four bits), and yy is the lower
- nibble (in decimal). The lower part of the table, i.e. positions
- 02/00 to 07/14 is exactly the same as ASCII.
-
- The upper part of the table contains the characters we can't
- live without in large parts of the world. Since I do not know how to
- send pictures in a standardised way (is macpaint documents OK?), I
- here include a table from ISO No.1:
-
- (Note: This was the draft. See below for more info)
-
- 10/00 NO-BREAK SPACE
- 10/01 INVERTED EXCLAMATION MARK
- 10/02 CENT SIGN
- 10/03 POUND SIGN
- 10/04 CURRENCY SIGN
- 10/05 YEN SIGN
- 10/06 BROKEN BAR
- 10/07 PARAGRAPH SIGN, SECTION SIGN
- 10/08 DIAERESIS
- 10/09 COPYRIGHT SIGN
- 10/10 FEMININE ORDINAL INDICATOR
- 10/11 LEFT ANGLE QUOTATION MARK
- 10/12 NOT SIGN
- 10/13 SOFT HYPHEN
- 10/14 REGISTERED TRADE MARK SIGN
- 10/15 MACRON
- 11/00 DEGREE SIGN
- 11/01 PLUS-MINUS SIGN
- 11/02 SUPERSCRIPT TWO
- 11/03 SUPERSCRIPT THREE
- 11/04 ACUTE ACCENT
- 11/05 SMALL GREEK LETTER MU, MICRO SIGN
- 11/06 PILCROW SIGN
- 11/07 MIDDLE DOT
- 11/08 CEDILLA
- 11/09 SUPERSCRIPT ONE
- 11/10 MASCULINE ORDINAL INDICATOR
- 11/11 RIGHT ANGLE QUOTATION MARK
- 11/12 VULGAR FRACTION ONE QUARTER
- 11/13 VULGAR FRACTION ONE HALF
- 11/14 VULGAR FRACTION THREE QUARTERS
- 11/15 INVERTED QUESTION MARK
- 12/00 CAPITAL LETTER A WITH GRAVE ACCENT
- 12/01 CAPITAL LETTER A WITH ACUTE ACCENT
- 12/02 CAPITAL LETTER A WITH CIRCUMFLEX ACCENT
- 12/03 CAPITAL LETTER A WITH TILDE
- 12/04 CAPITAL LETTER A DIAERESIS
- 12/05 CAPITAL LETTER A WITH RING ABOVE
- 12/06 CAPITAL DIPHTHONG A WITH E
- 12/07 CAPITAL LETTER C WITH CEDILLA
- 12/08 CAPITAL LETTER E WITH GRAVE ACCENT
- 12/09 CAPITAL LETTER E WITH ACUTE ACCENT
- 12/10 CAPITAL LETTER E WITH CIRCUMFLEX ACCENT
- 12/11 CAPITAL LETTER E WITH DIAERESIS
- 12/12 CAPITAL LETTER I WITH GRAVE ACCENT
- 12/13 CAPITAL LETTER I WITH ACUTE ACCENT
- 12/14 CAPITAL LETTER I WITH CIRCUMFLEX ACCENT
- 12/15 CAPITAL LETTER I WITH DIAERESIS
- 13/00 CAPITAL ICELANDIC LETTER ETH
- 13/01 CAPITAL LETTER N WITH TILDE
- 13/02 CAPITAL LETTER O WITH GRAVE ACCENT
- 13/03 CAPITAL LETTER O WITH ACUTE ACCENT
- 13/04 CAPITAL LETTER O WITH CIRCUMFLEX ACCENT
- 13/05 CAPITAL LETTER O WITH TILDE
- 13/06 CAPITAL LETTER O WITH DIAERESIS
- 13/07 (This position shall not be used)
- 13/08 CAPITAL LETTER O WITH OBLIQUE STROKE
- 13/09 CAPITAL LETTER U WITH GRAVE ACCENT
- 13/10 CAPITAL LETTER U WITH ACUTE ACCENT
- 13/11 CAPITAL LETTER U WITH CIRCUMFLEX ACCENT
- 13/12 CAPITAL LETTER U WITH DIAERESIS
- 13/13 CAPITAL LETTER Y WITH ACUTE ACCENT
- 13/14 CAPITAL ICELANDIC LETTER THORN
- 13/15 SMALL GERMAN LETTER SHARP s
- 14/00 SMALL LETTER a WITH GRAVE ACCENT
- 14/01 SMALL LETTER a WITH ACUTE ACCENT
- 14/02 SMALL LETTER a WITH CIRCUMFLEX ACCENT
- 14/03 SMALL LETTER a WITH TILDE
- 14/04 SMALL LETTER a WITH DIAERESIS
- 14/05 SMALL LETTER a WITH RING ABOVE
- 14/06 SMALL DIPHTHONG a WITH e
- 14/07 SMALL LETTER c WITH CEDILLA
- 14/08 SMALL LETTER e WITH GRAVE ACCENT
- 14/09 SMALL LETTER e WITH ACUTE ACCENT
- 14/10 SMALL LETTER e WITH CIRCUMFLEX ACCENT
- 14/11 SMALL LETTER e WITH DIAERESIS
- 14/12 SMALL LETTER i WITH GRAVE ACCENT
- 14/13 SMALL LETTER i WITH ACUTE ACCENT
- 14/14 SMALL LETTER i WITH CIRCUMFLEX ACCENT
- 14/15 SMALL LETTER i WITH DIAERESIS
- 15/00 SMALL ICELANDIC LETTER ETH
- 15/01 SMALL LETTER n WITH TILDE
- 15/02 SMALL LETTER o WITH GRAVE ACCENT
- 15/03 SMALL LETTER o WITH ACUTE ACCENT
- 15/04 SMALL LETTER o WITH CIRCUMFLEX ACCENT
- 15/05 SMALL LETTER o WITH TILDE
- 15/06 SMALL LETTER o WITH DIAERESIS
- 15/07 (This position shall not be used)
- 15/08 SMALL LETTER o WITH OBLIQUE STROKE
- 15/09 SMALL LETTER u WITH GRAVE ACCENT
- 15/10 SMALL LETTER u WITH ACUTE ACCENT
- 15/11 SMALL LETTER u WITH CIRCUMFLEX ACCENT
- 15/12 SMALL LETTER u WITH DIAERESIS
- 15/13 SMALL LETTER y WITH ACUTE ACCENT
- 15/14 SMALL ICELANDIC LETTER THORN
- 15/15 SMALL LETTER y WITH DIAERESIS
-
- End of table
-
- --------------------------------
-
- Note from lasko@video.dec.com (Tim Lasko) about ISO-Latin/1:
-
- ISO Latin-1, or more completely ISO Latin Alphabet No 1, is now an
- international standard as of February 1987 (IS 8859, Part 1).
- For those American USEnet'rs that care, the 8-bit ASCII standard,
- which is essentially the same code, is going through the final
- administrative processes prior to publication.
-
- The code table that was posted earlier by Mr. Sommarskog to the net is from
- an earlier draft of the standard, the following changes have been made:
-
- OLD DRAFT:
-
- 13/07 (This position shall not be used)
- 15/07 (This position shall not be used)
-
- FINAL STANDARD:
-
- 13/07 MULTIPLICATION SIGN
- 15/07 DIVISION SIGN
-
- Those two characters were added mainly out of the fear that individual vendors
- would use the positions for non-interchangeable and incompatible purposes,
- thus defeating the idea of the standard. The two symbols chosen were more
- or less a compromise from a large list of eligible characters.
-
- ISO Latin-1 (IS 8859/1) is actually one of an entire family of eight-bit
- one-byte character sets, all having ASCII on the left hand side, and with
- varying repertoires on the right hand side:
-
- Pt 1. Latin Alphabet No 1 (caters to Western Europe - now approved)
- Pt 2. Latin Alphabet No 2 (caters to Eastern Europe - now approved)
- Pt 3. Latin Alphabet No 3 (caters to SE Europe + others - in draft ballot)
- Pt 4. Latin Alphabet No 4 (caters to Northern Europe - in draft ballot)
- Pt 5. Latin-Cyrillic alphabet (right half all Cyrillic - processing
- currently suspended pending USSR input)
- Pt 6. Latin-Arabic alphabet (right half all Arabic - now approved)
- Pt 7. Latin-Greek alphabet (right half Greek + symbols - in draft ballot)
- Pt 8. Latin-Hebrew alphabet (right half Hebrew + symbols - proposed)
-
- I expect to update this list shortly, because next week I'm attending the
- meeting of the ISO Working Group concerned with these standards is being held.
- (ISO TC97/SC2/WG3 for those that can decipher that.)
-