ISO/IEC 8859-15
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ISO 8859-15 is part 15 of ISO 8859, a standard character encoding defined by International Organization for Standardization. It is also known as Latin-9, and unofficially as Latin-0 but not as Latin-15. It is similar to ISO 8859-1 but replaces some less common symbols with the euro sign and some other characters that were missing. It encodes characters as 8 bits and can be used to represent the alphabet and other important characters for storing English, French, German, Spanish and Portuguese (among other western European languages) texts on computers.
ISO-8859-15 (note the extra hyphen) is the IANA charset name for this standard used together with the control codes from ISO/IEC 6429 for the C0 (0x00–0x1F) and C1 (0x80–0x9F) parts. Escape sequences (from ISO/IEC 6429 or ISO/IEC 2022) are not to be interpreted. This charset has aliases ISO_8859-15 and Latin-9.
All the printable characters from both ISO 8859-1 and ISO 8859-15 are also found in Windows-1252.
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[edit] Changes from ISO-8859-1
Position | 0xA4 | 0xA6 | 0xA8 | 0xB4 | 0xB8 | 0xBC | 0xBD | 0xBE |
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8859-1 | ¤ | ¦ | ¨ | ´ | ¸ | ¼ | ½ | ¾ |
8859-15 | € | Š | š | Ž | ž | Œ | œ | Ÿ |
€ became necessary when the euro was introduced. The rest were excluded from ISO 8859-1, because it was motivated by information exchange and not typography. Š, š, Ž, and ž are used in some loanwords and transliteration of Russian names in Finnish and Estonian typography. Œ and œ are French ligatures, and Ÿ is needed in French all-caps text.
[edit] Complete table
Complete ISO-8859-15 map with differences from ISO-8859-1 highlighted.
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[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- ISO/IEC 8859-15:1999
- ISO/IEC 8859-15:1998 - 8-bit single-byte coded graphic character sets, Part 15: Latin alphabet No. 9 (draft dated August 1, 1997; superseded by ISO/IEC 8859-15:1999, published March 15, 1999)
- ISO-IR 203 European supplementary Latin set (September 16, 1998)