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Unicode and HTML
Web pages authored using hypertext markup language (HTML) may contain multilingual text represented with the Unicode universal character set. Key to the relationship between Unicode and HTML is the relationship between the "document character set" which defines the set of characters that may be present in a HTML document and assigns numbers to them and the "external character encoding" or "charset" used to encode a given document as a sequence of bytes. In RFC 1866, the initial HTML 2.0 standard, the document character set was defined as ISO-8859-1. It was extended to ISO 10646 (which is basically equivalent to Unicode) by RFC 2070. It does not vary between documents of different languages or created on different platforms.
FlicFlac Audio Converter - Sector Seven
Back to All Downloads Tiny Portable Audio Converter for WAV MP3 FLAC OGG and APE Version 1.03 · February 28, 2016
On the use of some MS Windows characters in HTML
The so-called MS Windows character set, or Windows Latin 1, contains, in addition to ISO Latin 1 (ISO 8859-1) characters, some special characters like em dash, trademark symbol, and asymmetric quote characters. A Web author who works in a Windows environment may not realize that by using such characters he creates problems to some users. Typically, if an author naively types a trademark symbol, a browser running on Unix or some other non-Windows system may display a blank instead of the trademark symbol, or something worse. This document explains this problem in some detail and outlines various solutions.
A tutorial on character code issues
This document tries to clarify the concepts of character repertoire, character code, and character encoding especially in the Internet context. It specifically avoids the term character set, which is confusingly used to denote repertoire or code or encoding. ASCII, ISO 646, ISO 8859 (ISO Latin, especially ISO Latin 1), Windows character set, ISO 10646, UCS, and Unicode, UTF-8, UTF-7, MIME, and QP are used as examples. This document in itself does not contain solutions to practical problems with character codes (but see section Further reading).