South Slavic Characters
Unicode: ISO-10646
Latin 2: ISO-8859-2
Microsoft Latin II: MS-CP1250
qwyx
US-ASCII: ISO-8859-1
ISO-646-YU
IBM-CP852
Apple-CE
Knowledge base
------------------------------------------------------------------ ISO-646-YU (YUSCII, CROSCII, SLOSCII) ------------------------------------------------------------------ Character Name RFC-1345 oct dec hex us-ascii ------------------------------------------------------------------ LATIN SMALL LETTER c WITH ACUTE c' 175 125 7D } LATIN CAPITAL LETTER C WITH ACUTE C' 135 93 5D ] LATIN SMALL LETTER c WITH CARON c< 176 126 7E ~ LATIN CAPITAL LETTER C WITH CARON C< 136 94 5E ^ LATIN SMALL LETTER d WITH STROKE d/ 174 124 7C | LATIN CAPITAL LETTER D WITH STROKE D/ 134 92 5C \ LATIN SMALL LETTER s WITH CARON s< 173 123 7B { LATIN CAPITAL LETTER S WITH CARON S< 133 91 5B [ LATIN SMALL LETTER z WITH CARON z< 140 96 60 ` LATIN CAPITAL LETTER Z WITH CARON Z< 100 64 40 @ ------------------------------------------------------------------
ISO-646-YU used to be (and still partly is) a very well known and heavily used standard on the Balkans. Attention: This standard uses ASCII coding points under 127(dec) for special South Slavic characters. In this way, it corrupts the used coding points. This standard is not at all suitable for world wide document distribution, since one needs a compatible font and has no possibility of concurently displaying corrupted coding points.
If you happen to see the upper test column ("us-ascii") as South Slavic characters, you luckily happen to have a very special browser-font configuration. Please do not forget that there are good chances that people around the world are mostly going to see brackets instead. This standard is not to be used in HTML-documents! The existing HTML-documents that use this standard should be revised.