ASCII
Henry Spencer
henry at utzoo.uucp
Tue Oct 25 06:17:51 AEST 1988
In article <3989 at rlvd.UUCP> caag at inf.rl.ac.uk (Crispin Goswell) writes:
>>ASCII is ASCII anywhere....
>
>Not in Europe it isn't. Pick up a manual for a Japanese matrix printer some
>time: you'll find at least ten variants...
The original statement stands: ASCII is ASCII everywhere. This is not
changed by the deplorable tendency to slap the label "ASCII" on anything
that happens to resemble ASCII in some way.
>Even in versions of ASCII for the same country you sometimes find that a
>subset of &$#^~\_{}[]` get variously interchanged on printers or VDUs.
These character sets are not versions of ASCII. They are instantiations
of the ISO 7-bit set; ASCII is another such instantiation.
ASCII is a single, well-defined, well-specified character set, with no
significant variations allowed. And by and large, existing implementations
of it follow the standard fairly well. There are a wide range of 8-bit
character sets that have ASCII as a subset, but the ASCII inside them is
generally pretty pure. (ASCII is defined as 7 and only 7 bits, so these
character sets are ASCII+XYZ, not variants of ASCII.) There are also a
number of other 7-bit character sets related to ASCII, in that they too
are instantiations of the ISO 7-bit set, but they are not ASCII, and only
marketing turkeys pretend that they are.
--
The dream *IS* alive... | Henry Spencer at U of Toronto Zoology
but not at NASA. |uunet!attcan!utzoo!henry henry at zoo.toronto.edu
More information about the Comp.unix.wizards
mailing list