Cena s DPH / bez DPH
Hlavní stránka>ISO/IEC 9995-9:2016 - Information technology - Keyboard layouts for text and office systems - Part 9: Multi-lingual, multiscript keyboard layouts
sklademVydáno: 2016-09-28
ISO/IEC 9995-9:2016 - Information technology - Keyboard layouts for text and office systems - Part 9: Multi-lingual, multiscript keyboard layouts

ISO/IEC 9995-9:2016

Information technology - Keyboard layouts for text and office systems - Part 9: Multi-lingual, multiscript keyboard layouts

Technologies de l’information - Disposition des claviers conçus pour la bureautique - Partie 9: Dispositions de claviers multilingues et multi-écritures

Formát
Dostupnost
Cena a měna
Anglicky Tisk
skladem
6321 Kč
Anglicky PDF
K okamžitému stažení
6321 Kč
Označení normy:ISO/IEC 9995-9:2016
Vydáno:2016-09-28
Edice:1
ICS:35.180
Popis

ISO/IEC 9995-9:2016

Within the general scope described in ISO/IEC 9995-1, ISO 9995-9:2016 defines the allocation on a keyboard of a set of graphic characters which, when used in combination with an existing national version keyboard layout, allows the input of a minimum character repertoire as defined herein.

This repertoire is intended to address all characters needed to write all contemporary languages using the Latin script, together with standardized Latin transliterations of some major languages using other scripts. It also contains all symbols and punctuation marks contained in ISO 8859-1, together with some selected other ones commonly used in typography and office use.

It also addresses characters of some other scripts (Greek, Cyrillic, Armenian, Georgian, Hebrew) to the same extent (in the case of Cyrillic, leaving out some minority languages of the Russian Federation which have only a few hundred speakers left). It provides means to include other scripts (e.g. Arabic, Devanagari) in future versions of ISO 9995-9:2016 (e.g. by amendments).

Furthermore, it addresses the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA).

ISO 9995-9:2016 is primarily intended for word-processing and text-processing applications, to be used with full-sized keyboards as well as with miniature keyboards found on mobile devices ("smartphones" or handheld computers), especially ones which have only keys for the 26 basic Latin letters but no dedicated keys for digits.