Template:Short description Template:Infobox character encoding ISO/IEC 8859-16:2001, Information technology — 8-bit single-byte coded graphic character sets — Part 16: Latin alphabet No. 10, is part of the ISO/IEC 8859 series of ASCII-based standard character encodings, first edition published in 2001. The same encoding was defined as Romanian Standard SR 14111 in 1998, named the "Romanian Character Set for Information Interchange".<ref>Template:Cite iso-ir</ref> It is informally referred to as Latin-10 or South-Eastern European. It was designed to cover Albanian, Croatian, Hungarian, Polish, Romanian, Serbian and Slovenian, but also French, German, Italian and Irish Gaelic (new orthography).
ISO-8859-16 is the IANA preferred charset name for this standard when supplemented with the C0 and C1 control codes from ISO/IEC 6429. Microsoft has assigned code page 28606 a.k.a. Windows-28606 to ISO-8859-16.<ref name="github.com">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>Template:Better source FreeDOS has assigned code page 65500 to ISO-8859-16.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Originally, ISO 8859-16 was proposed as a different encoding which was revised and renamed ISO 8859-0 by 1997, and is now ISO 8859-15 after a further revision.
Codepage layoutEdit
Differences from ISO-8859-1 have the Unicode code point number below the character.
ReferencesEdit
External linksEdit
- ISO/IEC 8859-16:2001
- ISO/IEC 8859-16:2000 - 8-bit single-byte coded graphic character sets, Part 16: Latin alphabet No. 10 (draft dated November 15, 1999; superseded by ISO/IEC 8859-16:2001, published July 15, 2001)
- ISO-IR 226 Romanian Character Set for Information Interchange (August 30, 1999, from Romanian Standard SR 14111:1998)
- https://www.math.nmsu.edu/~mleisher/Software/csets/8859-16.TXT