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Homepage>BS Standards>35 INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY. OFFICE MACHINES>35.040 Character sets and information coding>35.040.10 Coding of character sets>BS ISO 5426-2:1996 Information and documentation. Extension of the Latin alphabet coded character set for bibliographic information interchange Latin characters used in minor European languages and obsolete typography
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immediate downloadReleased: 1997-10-15
BS ISO 5426-2:1996 Information and documentation. Extension of the Latin alphabet coded character set for bibliographic information interchange Latin characters used in minor European languages and obsolete typography

BS ISO 5426-2:1996

Information and documentation. Extension of the Latin alphabet coded character set for bibliographic information interchange Latin characters used in minor European languages and obsolete typography

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Standard number:BS ISO 5426-2:1996
Pages:16
Released:1997-10-15
ISBN:0 580 28724 6
Status:Standard
DESCRIPTION

BS ISO 5426-2:1996


This standard BS ISO 5426-2:1996 Information and documentation. Extension of the Latin alphabet coded character set for bibliographic information interchange is classified in these ICS categories:
  • 35.040.10 Coding of character sets

1.1 This part of ISO 5426 specifies a set of 70 graphic characters with their coded representations intended primarily for the interchange of information among data processing systems and within message transmission systems. It consists of a code table and a legend showing each graphic, its use and its name.

1.2 These characters form a supplement to the extended Latin alphabet coded character set for bibliographic use (ISO 5426) in that they cover certain less common and obsolete languages that use the Latin script and obsolete printing conventions.

1.3 This character set, in conjunction with characters from ISO/IEC 646 and ISO 5426, is intended to handle information in the following languages: Anglo-Saxon; Greenlandic; Lappish; Latin; Latvian (older forms); Maltese.

It is also intended to cover printing conventions associated with older books, in particular, marks associated with binding signatures.