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| | ISO/IEC 8859 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | 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. |  | | ISO 8859, more formally ISO/IEC 8859, is a joint ISO and IEC standard for 8-bit character encodings for use by computers. |  | | The ISO 8859-n encodings only contain printable characters, and were designed to be used in conjunction with control characters mapped to the unassigned bytes. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_8859
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| | Re: Accept-Charset support |
 | | On Thu, 5 Dec 1996, Larry Masinter wrote: [snipped from a longer message:] > I think the simple thing to do is to send: > > accept-charset: utf-8,iso-8859-5 > > if you're a browser and can display utf-8 and 8859-5 as well as > 8859-1. |
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http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/www-international/msg00354.html
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| | G2 Character Support |
 | | 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). |  | | A ISO 8859-5 character consists of one byte, representing a 7-bit value. |  | | Assign the value zero into a two-byte value. |
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http://www.cs.fsu.edu/g2/g2doc/g2rm/g2chars8.htm
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| | Project 392_5, ISO/IEC 8859-5:1999 |
 | | This set of coded graphic characters may be regarded as a version of an 8-bit code according to ISO/IEC 2022 or ISO/IEC 4873 at level 1. |  | | This part of ISO/IEC 8859 specifies a set of 191 coded graphic characters identified as the Latin/ Cyrillic alphabet. |  | | ISO/IEC 8859-5:1999, Information technology - 8-bit single-byte coded graphic character sets - Part 5: Latin/Cyrillic alphabet |
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http://www.ncits.org/scopes/392_5.htm
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| | ISO 8859 Alphabet Soup |
 | | The ISO 8859 charsets were designed in the mid-1980s by the European Computer Manufacturer's Association ( |  | | > ISO 8859-15 will probably be implemented by a number of vendors, but it will take some time until a large percentage of the users start using those versions. |  | | But I still haven't seen any software to display all of Unicode on my Unix screen. |
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http://czyborra.com/charsets/iso8859.html
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| | manquery - -s 5 iconv_8859-2 @ Eastern Illinois University |
 | | All values in the tables are given in octal. |  | | SunOS 5.9 Last change: 18 Apr 1997 5 Standards, Environments, and Macros iconv_8859-2(5) __________________________________________________________________ |  | | Please contact the WEBMASTER for more information or to report any problems. |
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http://www.eiu.edu/cgi-bin/manquery?iconv_8859-2(5)
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| | [No title] |
 | | # # Name: ISO 8859-5:1999 to Unicode # Unicode version: 3.0 # Table version: 1.0 # Table format: Format A # Date: 1999 July 27 # Authors: Ken Whistler |
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http://www.unicode.org/Public/MAPPINGS/ISO8859/8859-5.TXT
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| | Configuring WWW Server for ISO 8859-2 |
 | | HTTP fields to the data returned to the client, so these should not be included in the ASIS file. |  | | The content of the document is determined by its MIME header ( |  | | There is no general way which would allow us to use the same suffix |
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http://nl.ijs.si/gnusl/cee/app/httpd.html
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| | Open Directory - Computers: Software: Globalization: Character Encoding: Cyrillic |
 | | Fingertip Software: ISO 8859-5 table - Table for this Cyrillic code set, also known as Soviet GOST 19768-74. |  | | ISO 8859-5 Latin/Cyrillic Alphabet - A table of the ISO 8859-5 code page. |  | | KOI8-R Russian Character Set - Information relating to the KOI8-R Russian character set. |
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http://dmoz.org/Computers/Software/Globalization/Character_Encoding/Cyrillic
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| | ISO Cyrillic Test Page |
 | | Your browser should automatically switch to a font with ISO Cyrillic encoding because this page contains "charset=iso-8859-5" tag in header. |  | | Attention: this page is not being maintained any longer, the information given on this page is probably out of date, and links may not work |  | | This is a test page for Cyrillic ISO 8859-5 encoding. |
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http://www.slovo.info/iso5.htm
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| | Natural Language Facilities |
 | | The Russian language facilities can help you to develop, run, and view applications in Russian using the Cyrillic alphabet (ISO 8859-5). |  | | KBs developed in Russian are platform independent, and can run without modification in any G2 language environment. |  | | This example shows entering 36 for the Cyrillic small letter zhe: |
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http://www.cs.fsu.edu/g2/g2doc/g2rm/natural8.htm
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| | 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. |  | | I am still busy writing my Unicode-HOWTO for Linux. |  | | I have added a Cyrillic.kmap that abuses the ISO 9 transliteration as an input method to the |
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http://czyborra.com/charsets/cyrillic.html
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| | iso_8859-2 |
 | | 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. |  | | The ISO 8859 standard includes several 8-bit extensions to the ASCII character set (also known as ISO 646-IRV). |  | | The fourth column will only show the proper glyphs in an environment configured for ISO 8859-2. |
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http://www.uni-kiel.de/rz/nvv/altix-doc/man_html/man7/iso_8859-2.7.html
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| | ISO 8859 Alphabet Soup |
 | | Note that RFC 1345 and GNU recode contain errors and use a preliminary and different latin6. |  | | 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 ( |
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http://www.global-translation-services.com/iso8859.html
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| | /Net/dxcern/userd/tbl/hypertext/WWW/Protocols/rfc1341/9_References.html |
 | | ISO 8613; Information Processing: Text and Office System; Office Document Architecture (ODA) and Interchange Format (ODIF), Part 1-8, 1989. |  | | International Standard--Information Processing-- ISO 7-bit and 8-bit coded character sets--Code extension techniques, ISO 2022:1986. |  | | International Standard--Information Processing-- ISO 7-bit coded character set for information interchange, ISO 646:1983. |
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http://www.bilkent.edu.tr/pub/WWW/Protocols/rfc1341/9_References.html
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| | The ISO 8859 standards series |
 | | Note that Russians seem to prefer the KOI8-R character set to the ISO set for computer purposes. |  | | KOI8-R is composed using the lower half (the first 128 characters) of the corresponding American ASCII character set; the upper half of the set contains the following characters: |  | | The kings of France were sworn in at Reims using a Gospel in Glagolithic characters attributed to St. Jerome. |
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http://alis.isoc.org/codage/iso8859/jeuxiso.en.htm
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| | iconv_unicode(5) |
 | | Yergeau, F., UTF-8, a transformation format of Unicode and ISO 10646, RFC 2044, Alis Technologies, October 1996. |  | | 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. |  | | ISO 8859-4 (Latin 4) Introduces letters for Estonian, Latvian, and Lithua- nian. |
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http://www.cs.usyd.edu.au/cgi-bin/man.cgi?section=5&topic=iconv_unicode
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| | ISO 8859-1 - definition of ISO 8859-1 in Encyclopedia |
 | | The name Latin-1 is an informal alias unrecognized by ISO or the IANA, but is perhaps meaningful in some computer software. |  | | The distinction between ISO 8859-1, ISO-8859-1, Windows-1252, and MacRoman is a common source of confusion among computer programmers. |  | | Older Apple Macintosh computers use an encoding, Mac-Roman, 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. |
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http://encyclopedia.laborlawtalk.com/ISO_8859-1
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| | ISO 8859 |
 | | 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 remaining 96 codes differ, depending on the particular set involved. |  | | They all are 8 bit codes, but for different purposes. |
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http://homepages.cwi.nl/~dik/english/codes/8859.html
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| | ISO/IEC 8859-5 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | 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. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_8859-5
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| | ISO 8859 series fonts |
 | | All you need to do is slip in a new encoding vector, which I provide. |
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http://bibliofile.mc.duke.edu/gww/fonts/ISO8859.html
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| | iso_8859_15 |
 | | ISO 8859-15 is a modification of ISO 8859-1 that covers these needs. |  | | 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. |  | | The ISO 8859 standard includes several 8-bit extensions to the ASCII character set (also known as ISO 646-IRV). |
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http://www.ctssn.com/man/index.cgi?section=7&topic=iso_8859_15
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| | ISO 8859 Character Sets |
 | | ISO 8859 is a standardized series of 8bit character sets for writing in Western alphabetic languages. |  | | A description of most of these character sets and correspondent charsets (or encoding) can be found in RFC 1345 and Cultural Registry maintained by Keld Simonsen. |  | | The following is a rough list of the languages accomodated in the ISO 8859 series. |
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http://www.terena.nl/library/multiling/ml-docs/iso-8859.html
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| | Re: Accept-Charset support |
 | | From www-international-request@www10.w3.org Thu Dec 5 18: 45:49 1996 |  | | User agent can do necessary translations, but what actually gets displayed is not the same as on ISO 8859-1 terminal. |  | | 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. |
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http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/www-international/msg00330.html
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| | XML and Web Service Glossary: ISO 8859 |
 | | 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. |  | | [Relevance: 1; Date: 1999] International Organization for Standardization, Information technology — 8-bit single-byte coded graphic character sets, ISO/IEC 8859, 1999. |  | | The variants are identified by a trailing number indicating the specific variant, for example ISO 8859-1 for the Latin-1 character set. |
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http://dret.net/glossary/iso8859
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| | [No title] |
 | | * ISO-8859-16 We implement this because it's an ISO standard. |  | | * ISO-8859-14 We implement this because it's an ISO standard. |
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http://www.opensource.apple.com/darwinsource/7.0b1/libiconv/libiconv/NOTES
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| | Anchor Stone International - Newsletter 15: April/June 1996 |
 | | Cicero and Ovid both wrote of an ingenious planetarium devised by Archimedes which simulated the movement of the sun, the moon, and 5 planets. |  | | There is one mention in the ancient records of a device which may be similar. |  | | We'll probably never know what this device was or who made it. |
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http://www.anchorstone.com/content/view/74/39
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| | The Probert Encyclopaedia - ttp-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1"> |
 | | 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. |  | | The stem is prostrate and nearly round, prickly below, bristly above. |  | | Excretion is the process of getting rid of unwanted substances from within the body. |
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http://www.galgani.it/free_encyclopedia/B3.HTM
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| | Code Pages Supported by Windows -- ISO Code Pages |
 | | The list below provides links to graphical representations, and textual listings, of each of the ISO 8859 character sets: |  | | Code Pages Supported by Windows -- ISO Code Pages |
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http://www.microsoft.com/globaldev/reference/iso.mspx
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| | PPT Slide |
 | | 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. |  | | 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 |
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http://www.euronet.nl/users/jelleb/IntJan2002/tsld006.htm
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| | Valerian Luft: - Company Information |
 | | Web keywords: valerian, settings menu, iso 8859, text converter, iso 8859 5, valerian luft, flat buttons, multilingual interface, translit, translit to cyrillic, russian encodings, graphic interface |
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http://www.soft411.org/company/Valerian-Luft/about.html
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| | 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. |  | | Frank da Cruz, The Kermit Project, Columbia University, March 2003 |  | | The Latin/Cyrillic characters are included literally within the brackets at the left of each row. |
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http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/cyrillic.html
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| | ISO 8859-5, Soviet GOST 19768-74 |
 | | ISO 8859-5, Soviet GOST 19768-74 follows the Soviet GOST Standard 19768-74, ST SEV 358-88 for placement of the Russian alphabet. |  | | Registered with ISO on May 1, 1988, Registration No. 144. |
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http://www.fingertipsoft.com/ref/cyrillic/iso88595.html
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| | [No title] |
 | | 6 (0.5 %) discard-report@pobox.com 5 (0.4 %) "Matthew Burch" |
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http://www.homeport.org/~shevett/spamreport.txt
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