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Topic: ISO 8859 5


  
  ISO 8859-5 Latin/Cyrillic Alphabet
This page contains a table of ISO 8859-5 Latin/Cyrillic Alphabet for Russian and certain other languages written in the Cyrillic alphabet.
The Latin/Cyrillic characters are included literally within the brackets at the left of each row.
Frank da Cruz, The Kermit Project, Columbia University, March 2003
www.columbia.edu /kermit/cyrillic.html   (68 words)

  
  ISO/IEC 8859 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
ISO 8859 sought to remedy this problem by utilizing the eighth bit in an 8-bit byte in order to allow positions for another 128 characters.
The ISO 8859 standard is designed for reliable information exchange, not typography; the standard omits symbols needed for high-quality typography, such as optional ligatures, curly quotation marks, dashes, etc. As a result, high-quality typesetting systems often use proprietary or idiosyncratic extensions on top of the ASCII and ISO 8859 standards, or use Unicode instead.
ISO 8859 was favored throughout the 1990s, having the advantages of being well-established and more easily implemented in software: the equation of one byte to one character is simple and adequate for most single-language applications, and there are no combining characters or variant forms.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/ISO_8859   (2019 words)

  
 manquery - -s 5 iconv_8859-2 @ Eastern Illinois University   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
ISO 8859-2 to MS 1250 For the conversion of ISO 8859-2 to MS 1250, all characters not in the following table are mapped unchanged.
ISO 8859-2 to MS 852 For the conversion of ISO 8859-2 to MS 852, all characters not in the following table are mapped unchanged.
ISO 8859-2 to Mazovia For the conversion of ISO 8859-2 to Mazovia, all characters not in the following table are mapped unchanged.
www.eiu.edu /cgi-bin/manquery?iconv_8859-2(5)   (279 words)

  
 ISO 8859 series fonts   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
ISO 8859 is a series of 14 (currently) character set encodings for 8bit character sets.
See ISO 8859 Alphabet Soup for a good description of the series.
This is Latin 5 (which is just the same as Latin 1 except the Icelandic characters have been replaced with Turkish ones).
bibliofile.mc.duke.edu /gww/fonts/ISO8859.html   (461 words)

  
 ISO 8859-1   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
The ISO-8859-x sets each add the ISO 646 C0 "control" characters from 00-1F, a control character at 7F, and control characters in the 80-9F range, thus encompassing a total of 256 characters.
ISO-8859-1 is unique among these sets in that that its coded characters are equivalent to the first 256 code points of Unicode.
Older Apple Macintosh computers use an encoding, MacRoman, that differs from ISO 8859-1 in the first 32 and beyond the first 127 characters, but does include all characters present in ISO 8859-1 at other locations, with the exception of the soft hyphen.
www.sciencedaily.com /encyclopedia/iso_8859_1   (917 words)

  
 The Probert Encyclopaedia - ttp-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1">
The leaves are comprised of 3 - 5 leaflets and the fruit consists of a few large drupes covered with greyish bloom and half enclosed in the calyx.
The dhole (red dog or Asiatic wild dog) is two species of wild dog, one found in Siberia and the other in India.
Eyebright is a small plant of the Scrophulariaceae, standing about 5 to 15 cm tall, with deeply cut leaves and loose spikes of numerous white or purplish flowers with yellow patches.
www.galgani.it /free_encyclopedia/B3.HTM   (3967 words)

  
 iso_8859-2   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
The ISO 8859 standard includes several 8-bit extensions to the ASCII character set (also known as ISO 646-IRV).
ISO 8859-2, the "Latin Alphabet No. 2" is used to encode Central and Eastern European Latin characters and is implemented by several program vendors.
ISO 8859-2 supports the following languages: Albanian, Bosnian, Croatian, Czech, English, Finnish, German, Hungarian, Irish, Polish, Slovak, Slovenian and Sorbian.
www.uni-kiel.de /rz/nvv/altix-doc/man_html/man7/iso_8859-2.7.html   (822 words)

  
 ISO 8859   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
ISO 8859 consists of a number of different standards.
The first 160 codes are always the same (the C0 control codes in positions 0 to 31, the G0 graphic set in positions 32 to 127 and the C1 control codes in postions 128 to 159, see ISO standard 2022 for more details).
The following sets are currently defined (not, when the set is standardized, the reference is to the particular G1 set in the ISO 2022 tree).
homepages.cwi.nl /~dik/english/codes/8859.html   (148 words)

  
 Learn more about ISO 8859-1 in the online encyclopedia.   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Learn more about ISO 8859-1 in the online encyclopedia.
There are additional parts to the ISO/IEC 8859 standard that have corresponding IANA-approved character sets, e.g.
The distinction between ISO 8859-1, ISO--8859-1, Windows-1252, and MacRoman is a common source of confusion among computer programmers.
www.onlineencyclopedia.org /i/is/iso_8859_1.html   (805 words)

  
 ISO 8859 Alphabet Soup
The ISO 8859 charsets are not even remotely as complete as the truly great Unicode but they have been around and usable for quite a while (first
ISO 10646) will make this whole chaos of mutually incompatible charsets superfluous because it unifies a superset of all established charsets and is out to cover all the world's languages.
ISO 639 language codes for some 150 of the world's several thousand known languages.
czyborra.com /charsets/iso8859.html   (1564 words)

  
 XML and Web Service Glossary: ISO 8859
ISO 8859 is a family of Character Sets standardized by ISO.
All ISO 8859 variants are 8-bit Character Sets, containing a total of 256 characters.
The first half of the variants (characters 0-127) is always occupied by the ASCII Character Set, while the second half (characters 128-255) is occupied by characters specific to the variant.
dret.net /glossary/iso8859   (228 words)

  
 ISO 8859 Character Sets   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
ISO 8859 is a standardized series of 8bit character sets for writing in Western alphabetic languages.
The ISO 8859 series lacks the ligatures Dutch ij, French oe and,,German`` quotation marks, as well as several other characters.
Latin 5 replaces the rarely needed Icelandic letters in Latin 1 with the Turkish ones.
www.terena.nl /library/multiling/ml-docs/iso-8859.html   (472 words)

  
 iso_8859_15
Especially important is ISO 8859-1, the "Latin Alphabet No. 1", which has become widely implemented and may already be seen as the de-facto standard ASCII replacement.
ISO 8859-15 is a modification of ISO 8859-1 that covers these needs.
ISO 8859-15 supports the following languages: Albanian, Basque, Breton, Catalan, Danish, Dutch, English, Estonian, Faroese, Finnish, French, Frisian, Galician, German, Greenlandic, Icelandic, Irish Gaelic, Italian, Latin, Luxemburgish, Norwegian, Portuguese, Rhaeto-Romanic, Scottish Gaelic, Spanish, and Swedish.
www.ctssn.com /man/index.cgi?section=7&topic=iso_8859_15   (126 words)

  
 Re: Accept-Charset support   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Larry Masinter wrote: > # That implies that sending > # Accept-Charset: utf-8 > # Should generate a 406 response if the document is only available in, say, > # Latin-1 and the server cannot convert that to UTF-8.
ISO 8859-5 terminal can't represent iso-8859-1 with q=1.0.
User agent can do necessary translations, but what actually gets displayed is not the same as on ISO 8859-1 terminal.
lists.w3.org /Archives/Public/www-international/msg00330.html   (283 words)

  
 Project 392_5, ISO/IEC 8859-5:1999   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
This part of ISO/IEC 8859 specifies a set of 191 coded graphic characters identified as the Latin/ Cyrillic alphabet.
This part of ISO/IEC 8859 may not be used in conjunction with any other parts of ISO/IEC 8859.
NOTE - ISO/IEC 8859 is not intended for use with Telematic services defined by ITU-T. If information coded according to ISO/IEC 8859 is to be transferred to such services, it will have to conform to the requirements of those services at the access-point.
www.ncits.org /scopes/392_5.htm   (287 words)

  
 ISO 8859 Alphabet Soup
ISO 8859 is a full series of standardized multilingual single-byte coded (8bit) graphic character sets for writing in alphabetic languages:
The ISO 8859 charsets were designed in the mid-1980s by the European Computer Manufacturer's Association (ECMA) and endorsed by the International Standards Organisation (
Characters 0 to 127 are always identical with US-ASCII and the positions 128 to 159 hold some less used control characters: the so-called C1 set from ISO 6429.
www.global-translation-services.com /iso8859.html   (516 words)

  
 G2 Character Support   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
A ISO 8859-5 character consists of one byte, representing a 7-bit value.
Each ISO 8859-5 character has a distinct representation in the Gensym character set.
For example, given the ISO 8859-5 character code 81 (or 0x51 hexadecimal), assign its value into a two-byte value containing the value 0 (zero), producing the sum 81 (or 0x0051 hexadecimal).
www.cs.fsu.edu /g2/g2doc/g2rm/g2chars8.htm   (206 words)

  
 Man Page: iconv_unicode(5)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
ISO 8859 character sets using Latin alphabetic characters are distinguished as follows:
It is an incomplete predecessor of ISO 8859-10 (Latin 6).
Adds the last Inuit (Greenlandic) and Sami (Lappish) letters that were not included in ISO 8859-4 (Latin 4) to complete coverage of the Nordic area.
www.cse.msu.edu /cgi-bin/man2html?iconv_unicode?5?/usr/man   (492 words)

  
 Configuring WWW Server for ISO 8859-2
An empty token implicitely assumes ISO 8859-1 (or US-ASCII, which is a subset of it).
Within an intranet (the in-house information system) in an enviroment where ISO 8859-2 encoding is used, one might freely choose to encode all the documents in ISO 8859-2.
If the intended audience is broader, however, one has to realize that ISO 8859-2 encoding is seldom used outside the Central and Eastern Europe, and that the current HTTP specification does not require a browser to be capable to display a document encoded in ISO 8859-2.
nl.ijs.si /gnusl/cee/app/httpd.html   (1217 words)

  
 The ISO 8859 standards series
The kings of France were sworn in at Reims using a Gospel in Glagolithic characters attributed to St. Jerome.
Note that Russians seem to prefer the KOI8-R character set to the ISO set for computer purposes.
The ISO 8859-9 set, or Latin 5, replaces the rarely used Icelandic letters from Latin 1 with Turkish letters.
alis.isoc.org /codage/iso8859/jeuxiso.en.htm   (710 words)

  
 iconv_unicode(5)
ISO 8859-4 (Latin 4) Introduces letters for Estonian, Latvian, and Lithua- nian.
ISO 8859-9 (Latin 5) Replaces the rarely needed Icelandic letters in ISO 8859-1 (Latin 1) with the Turkish ones.
ISO 8859-10 (Latin 6) Adds the last Inuit (Greenlandic) and Sami (Lappish) letters that were not included in ISO 8859-4 (Latin 4) to complete coverage of the Nordic area.
www.cs.usyd.edu.au /cgi-bin/man.cgi?section=5&topic=iconv_unicode   (519 words)

  
 PPT Slide   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
ISO 8859-1 Latin 1, ISO 8859-2 Latin 2, ISO 8859-3 Latin 3, ISO 8859-4 Latin 4, ISO 8859-5 Latin 5, ISO 8859-6 Latin 6, ISO 8859-7 Latin 7, ISO 8859-8 Latin 8, ISO 8859-9 Latin 9
Most of these code pages are based on a set of ISO standard code pages.
Although they tend to be equipped with the accented characters that support languages, they do not contain the punctuation marks and other symbols which are required.
www.euronet.nl /users/jelleb/IntJan2002/tsld006.htm   (77 words)

  
 Anchor Stone International - Newsletter 15: April/June 1996   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Their boundaries were over 5 kilometers (3 miles) in circumference, which is no small town.
Many of the accounts of these cities mention the fact that there are no doors or windows on the main streets, and as we read in the above account, they like to attribute this to some sort of "wind control" or other such explanations.
Cicero and Ovid both wrote of an ingenious planetarium devised by Archimedes which simulated the movement of the sun, the moon, and 5 planets.
www.anchorstone.com /content/view/74/39   (7905 words)

  
 /Net/dxcern/userd/tbl/hypertext/WWW/Protocols/rfc1341/9_References.html   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
International Standard--Information Processing-- ISO 7-bit and 8-bit coded character sets--Code extension techniques, ISO 2022:1986.
Part 9: Latin alphabet No. 5, ISO 8859-9, 1990.
ISO 8613; Information Processing: Text and Office System; Office Document Architecture (ODA) and Interchange Format (ODIF), Part 1-8, 1989.
www.bilkent.edu.tr /pub/WWW/Protocols/rfc1341/9_References.html   (258 words)

  
 ISO 8859-5 - Definition, explanation
ISO 8859-5, also known as Cyrillic is an 8-bit character encoding, part of the ISO 8859 standard.
It was designed originally to cover languages using a Cyrillic alphabet such as Bulgarian, Belarusian, Russian, and Ukrainian (except for the letter Ge, which was unused in the Soviet Union), but never got widespread use.
A table of the ISO 8859-5 code page.
www.calsky.com /lexikon/en/txt/i/is/iso_8859_5.php   (252 words)

  
 ISO Cyrillic Test Page   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
This is a test page for Cyrillic ISO 8859-5 encoding.
Your browser should automatically switch to a font with ISO Cyrillic encoding because this page contains "charset=iso-8859-5" tag in header.
A really great overview of all ISO 8859 codepages by Roman Czyborra
www.slovo.info /iso5.htm   (130 words)

  
 The Cyrillic Charset Soup
Even though ISO 8859 contains a standard Cyrillic charset, there is a whole bunch of other Cyrillic encodings being used on computers worldwide.
ISO 8859 (in spite of the Soviet vote against its dollar sign) as final ISO-8859-5 (ISO-IR-144) in 1988.
I have added a Cyrillic.kmap that abuses the ISO 9 transliteration as an input method to the
czyborra.com /charsets/cyrillic.html   (1620 words)

  
 Encyclopedia article on ISO 8859-1 [EncycloZine]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
The distinction between ISO 8859-1, ISO-8859-1, Windows-1252, and MacRoman is a common source of confusion among computer programmers and on the internet.
Products related to ISO 8859-1: books, DVD, electronics, garden, kitchen, magazines, music, photo, posters, software, tools, toys, VHS, videogames
Visit Curious-Minds.co.UK for educational games and toys, and science kits.
encyclozine.com /ISO_8859-1   (818 words)

  
 The Cyrillic Charset Soup
Even though ISO 8859 contains a standard Cyrillic charset, there is a whole bunch of other Cyrillic encodings being used on computers worldwide.
ISO 8859 (in spite of the Soviet vote against its dollar sign) as final ISO-8859-5 (ISO-IR-144) in 1988.
I have added a Cyrillic.kmap that abuses the ISO 9 transliteration as an input method to the
www.czyborra.com /charsets/cyrillic.html   (1620 words)

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