Character encoding
From Just Solve the File Format Problem
(Difference between revisions)
Dan Tobias (Talk | contribs) (→References) |
Dan Tobias (Talk | contribs) (→Format details) |
||
Line 139: | Line 139: | ||
* [[C0 controls]] (ASCII control characters, 7 bit) | * [[C0 controls]] (ASCII control characters, 7 bit) | ||
* [[C1 controls]] (extended control characters, 8 bit) | * [[C1 controls]] (extended control characters, 8 bit) | ||
+ | |||
+ | == Character escape codes == | ||
+ | (used to enter characters in various systems and formats) | ||
+ | * [[Alt codes]] (DOS/Windows) | ||
+ | * [[Backslash escapes]] (used in various programming and markup languages) | ||
+ | * [[HTML character references]] (entities and numeric values) | ||
== Tools == | == Tools == |
Revision as of 00:31, 13 April 2013
- Adobe Standard Encoding
- ANSEL
- APL code page
- ARMSCII
- ASCII
- ATASCII (used by Atari computers)
- Baudot code
- Braille
- Compucolor character set
- EBCDIC
- IBM PC code pages
- ISO 646
- ISO 646-CA (Canada / French)
- ISO 646-CA-2 (Canada / French)
- ISO 646-CH (Switzerland)
- ISO 646-CN (China / Basic Latin)
- ISO 646-CU (Cuba / Spanish)
- ISO 646-DE (Germany)
- ISO 646-DK (Denmark)
- ISO 646-FI (Finland)
- ISO 646-FR (France)
- ISO 646-GB (Great Britain)
- ISO 646-HU (Hungary)
- ISO 646-IRV (International Reference Version)
- ISO 646-IT (Italy)
- ISO 646-JP (Japan / Romaji)
- ISO 646-JP OCR-B (Japan / Romaji)
- ISO 646-KR (Korea / Latin)
- ISO 646-MT (Malta)
- ISO 646-NL (Netherlands)
- ISO 646-NO (Norway)
- ISO 646-NO-2 (Norway)
- ISO 646-PT (Portugal)
- ISO 646-SE (Sweden)
- ISO 646-SE-2 (Sweden)
- ISO 646-US (Same as ASCII)
- ISO 646-YU (Yugoslavia)
- ISO 2022
- ISO 8859
- ISO 8859-1 (Latin-1)
- ISO 8859-2 (Latin-2, Central/East European)
- ISO 8859-3 (Latin-3, Esperanto, Galician, Maltese, and Turkish)
- ISO 8859-4 (Latin-4, Scandinavian and Baltic)
- ISO 8859-5 (Cyrillic)
- ISO 8859-6 (Arabic)
- ISO 8859-7 (Modern Greek)
- ISO 8859-8 (Hebrew)
- ISO 8859-9 (Latin-5, Turkish)
- ISO 8859-10 (Latin-6, Lappish, Nordic, and Inuit)
- ISO 8859-11 (Thai)
- ISO 8859-13 (Latin-7, Baltic Rim)
- ISO 8859-14 (Celtic)
- ISO 8859-15 (Latin-9, Latin-1 with a Euro sign)
- ISO 8859-16 (Romanian)
- JIS
- KOI8
- Macintosh encodings
- Morse code
- MS-DOS encodings
- PETSCII (or PET ASCII or CBM ASCII; used by Commodore computers)
- Unicode
- VISCII
- Windows encodings
- Windows 1252 (ISO 8859-1 plus additional characters)
- Windows 1255 (Hebrew)
- Windows 1256 (Arabic, Farsi, Urdu)
- Windows 1257 (Baltic Rim)
- Windows 1258 (Vietnamese)
Contents |
Format details
- Byte Order Mark
- C0 controls (ASCII control characters, 7 bit)
- C1 controls (extended control characters, 8 bit)
Character escape codes
(used to enter characters in various systems and formats)
- Alt codes (DOS/Windows)
- Backslash escapes (used in various programming and markup languages)
- HTML character references (entities and numeric values)
Tools
External links
- Lots of character encoding charts
- The Evolution of Character Codes, 1874–1968
- Collection of character encodings
- The Absolute Minimum Every Software Developer Absolutely, Positively Must Know About Unicode and Character Sets (No Excuses!) by Joel Spolsky
- Character encoding bugs are 𝒜wesome!
References
- Ken Lunde, CJKV Information Processing, O'Reilly 2008, ISBN 978-0-596-51447-1 (has lots of information on encodings and Unicode in general, not only for CJKV locales)
- IBM 3270 character set reference (1987)