
CCS Standards
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91
e 15 parts of ISO 8859Table 3-14.
Part Year Contents Languages
15 1999 Latin alphabet No. 9 Part 1 revision
16 2001 Latin alphabet No. 10 Albanian, Croatian, Finnish, French, German, Hungarian, Irish Gaelic,
Italian, Polish, Romanian, Slovenian
Table 3-15 lists the 95 additional non-ASCII characters from ISO 8859-1:1998 (also
known as ISO Latin-1 or ISO-8859-1). Appendix M provides a complete ISO 8859-1:1998
code table.
ISO 8859-1:1998 character samplesTable 3-15.
Character class Characters
Lowercase Latin
àáâãäåæçèéêëìíîïðñòóôõöøùúûüýþÿ
Uppercase Latin
ÀÁÂÃÄÅÆÇÈÉÊËÌÍÎÏÐÑÒÓÔÕÖØÙÚÛÜÝÞß
Symbols
¡¢£¤¥¦§¨©ª«¬-®¯°±²³´μ¶•¸¹º»¼½¾¿×÷
ese characters, as you can probably guess, are not that useful when working with CJKV
text. In fact, many of them are not found in CJKV CCSes. is table simply illustrates
the types of characters available in the ISO 8859 series. Note again that these additional
ASCII character sets require a full 8 bits per character for encoding because they contain
far more than 128 characters.
CJKV-Roman
e Chinese, Japanese, Koreans, and Vietnamese have developed their own variants of
the ASCII character set, known as GB-Roman (from GB 1988-89), CNS-Roman (from
CNS 5205-1989), JIS-Roman (from JIS X 0201-1997), KS-Roman (from KS X 1003:1993),
and TCVN-Roman (from TCVN 5712:1993), respectively. Or, these can be collectively
referred to as CJKV-Roman.