Windows 1252
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'''Windows 1252''' is a character encoding used in Microsoft Windows systems, particularly English-langauge installations. It includes all the printable characters of [[ISO 8859-1]] (Latin-1) (plus the [[ASCII]] control characters of the [[C0 controls]]), as well as additional characters in the range 128-159, which in ISO 8859 is reserved for control characters of the [[C1 controls]]. It's often falsely claimed to be an ANSI standard. | '''Windows 1252''' is a character encoding used in Microsoft Windows systems, particularly English-langauge installations. It includes all the printable characters of [[ISO 8859-1]] (Latin-1) (plus the [[ASCII]] control characters of the [[C0 controls]]), as well as additional characters in the range 128-159, which in ISO 8859 is reserved for control characters of the [[C1 controls]]. It's often falsely claimed to be an ANSI standard. | ||
− | Websites and e-mail messages often mistakenly use headers and parameters claiming a document or message to be in ISO-8859-1 when it actually uses characters that are part of Windows 1252. | + | Websites and e-mail messages often mistakenly use headers and parameters claiming a document or message to be in ISO-8859-1 when it actually uses characters that are part of Windows 1252. Bogus numeric character references in HTML, in the range of <code>&128;</code> through <code>&159;</code>, will also sometimes turn up, usually extruded by misbehaving web-authoring programs, when such references are intended by the standards to be Unicode code positions, not codes from a system-specific encoding. |
== References == | == References == |
Revision as of 12:14, 29 April 2014
Windows 1252 is a character encoding used in Microsoft Windows systems, particularly English-langauge installations. It includes all the printable characters of ISO 8859-1 (Latin-1) (plus the ASCII control characters of the C0 controls), as well as additional characters in the range 128-159, which in ISO 8859 is reserved for control characters of the C1 controls. It's often falsely claimed to be an ANSI standard.
Websites and e-mail messages often mistakenly use headers and parameters claiming a document or message to be in ISO-8859-1 when it actually uses characters that are part of Windows 1252. Bogus numeric character references in HTML, in the range of &128;
through &159;
, will also sometimes turn up, usually extruded by misbehaving web-authoring programs, when such references are intended by the standards to be Unicode code positions, not codes from a system-specific encoding.