RIP ISO 8859?

Thursday, 8 July 2004 12:46
pne: A picture of a plush toy, halfway between a duck and a platypus, with a green body and a yellow bill and feet. (Default)
[personal profile] pne

A recent edit to the en Wikipedia article on ISO 8859 added this bit:

The ISO/IEC 8859 standard was maintained by ISO/IEC Joint Technical Committee 1, Subcommittee 2, Working Group 3 (ISO/IEC JTC 1/SC 2/WG 3). In June 2004, WG 3 disbanded, and maintenance duties were transferred to SC 2. The standard is not currently being updated, as the Subcommittee's only remaining Working Group, WG 2, is concentrating on development of ISO/IEC 10646.

Date: Thursday, 8 July 2004 07:33 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jordik.livejournal.com
Good riddance...

Unicode baby yeah!

Date: Thursday, 8 July 2004 08:23 (UTC)
ext_78: A picture of a plush animal. It looks a bit like a cross between a duck and a platypus. (Default)
From: [identity profile] pne.livejournal.com
In a world that's closer to ideal than this one is, yes.

(Said world would also include widespread support for language-specific glyph shaping, for starters, so we wouldn't have the Romanian mess.)

Date: Thursday, 8 July 2004 09:40 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jordik.livejournal.com
Oh yes.

Not that I hate 8859-x per sè (I did a lot of work on the various ISO-8859-x articles (I wrote most of them except the main ones), but the main reason I dislike it is the ASCIIcentricism they still propagate: Á (a acute) is "normal", but n (n acute) is "weird"?

ASCIIcentrism

Date: Thursday, 8 July 2004 09:55 (UTC)
ext_78: A picture of a plush animal. It looks a bit like a cross between a duck and a platypus. (Default)
From: [identity profile] pne.livejournal.com
Not sure why you say that's ASCIIcentric?

ASCII treats 'a' and 'n' both the same (they're both there) and 'á' and 'ń' also both the same (they're both absent).

ISO-8859-1 has 'á' but not 'ń', while ISO-8859-2 has both. But I'm not sure why you think that's significant, since they serve different languages.

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pne: A picture of a plush toy, halfway between a duck and a platypus, with a green body and a yellow bill and feet. (Default)
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