- From: Paul Hoffman / IMC <phoffman@imc.org>
- Date: Tue, 06 Jan 2004 09:35:04 -0800
- To: iana@iana.org
- Cc: ietf-charsets@iana.org
IANA: Please insert the enclosed registration into the charset registry. --Paul Hoffman, acting as charset reviewer >Date: Sun, 30 Mar 2003 18:37:23 -0800 (PST) >From: msokolov@ivan.Harhan.ORG (Michael Sokolov) >Subject: Registration of new charset KOI7-switched >To: ietf-charsets@iana.org >Spam-test: False ; 1.9 / 4.5 > >Charset name: KOI7-switched > >Charset aliases: None > >Suitability for use in MIME text: Yes > >Published specifications: > >The charset is a 7-bit Character Encoding Scheme (CES) as follows. Each octet >MUST have value between 0 and 177 octal, inclusive. Octets with values 0 >through 15 octal (inclusive) and 20 through 177 octal (inclusive) are to be >interpreted per one of two Coded Character Sets (CCS's): ISO_646.irv:1983 and >ISO_5427. The CCS to use is determined by the switch state. Octet >with value 16 >octal selects ISO_5427 and octet with value 17 octal selects ISO_646.irv:1983. >The initial CCS is ISO_646.irv:1983. > >HISTORICAL NOTE: This charset was used in Soviet computer systems as a >replacement for ASCII. It was intended to do for Soviet computer systems what >ASCII does for American ones. The only additional feature required by the >former is encoding of Russian letters. To achieve the above goal Soviet >standards defined several 7-bit charsets, all of which were called KOI-7. >KOI-7 N0 was the Soviet name for ISO 646 IRV, which is the same as US-ASCII >except for rendering 44 octal as the international currency symbol instead of >the dollar sign, and KOI-7 N1 (registered as ISO_5427) had English letters and >some special characters replaced with Russian letters. The two KOI-7 >CCS's were >commonly used with the CES described above to achieve functionality which is a >superset of ASCII and Russian. > >An ISO 2022 compliant terminal can be prepared for displaying KOI7-switched >text with the following sequence: > >ESC ( @ ESC ) N LS0 > >Additional information: > >Person & email address to contact for further information: > >Michael Sokolov >International Free Computing Task Force (IFCTF) >msokolov@ivan.Harhan.ORG > >Intended usage: LIMITED USE > >This charset is not as convenient as the several 8-bit CCS's available for >Latin/Cyrillic encoding, however, when a 7-bit communication channel must be >used using this charset is much more efficient than using an 8-bit CCS such as >ISO_8859-5 or KOI-8 and then encoding it with a scheme such as uuencode, MIME >base64, or MIME quoted-printable.
Received on Tuesday, 6 January 2004 12:43:23 UTC