Macintosh encodings
From Just Solve the File Format Problem
Revision as of 02:39, 21 May 2019 by Dan Tobias (Talk | contribs)
The Macintosh "Classic" OS (before OS X) used a number of 8-bit encodings for various locales. These are supersets of ASCII but don't resemble any other standard encoding in the range from 128 to 255. MacSymbol and MacDingbats are graphic character sets that are completely different from ASCII.
Text encoded with the Macintosh fonts often uses just CR (0X0D) for a line ending, without LF (0X0A).
Macintosh encodings may include an "Apple logo" character, making Unicode mappings problematical, due to Unicode's policy of not encoding corporate logos. In practice, the Apple logo is usually encoded as U+F8FF, in Unicode's "private use" area.
List of encodings
- MacCE (Central Europe) - Code chart from MSDN
- MacCyrillic - Code chart from MSDN
- MacDingbats - Code chart from KreativeKorp
- MacGreek - Code chart from MSDN
- MacGujarati - Code chart from KreativeKorp
- MacGurmukhi - Code chart from KreativeKorp
- MacIcelandic - Code chart from MSDN
- MacRoman (a.k.a. "macintosh")
- MacRomania - Code chart from KreativeKorp
- MacSymbol - Code chart from KreativeKorp
- MacThai - Code chart from KreativeKorp
- MacTurkish - Code chart from MSDN