1 # ****************************************************************************** 2 # * 3 # * Copyright (C) 1995-2013, International Business Machines 4 # * Corporation and others. All Rights Reserved. 5 # * 6 # ****************************************************************************** 7 8 # If this converter alias table looks very confusing, a much easier to 9 # understand view can be found at this demo: 10 # http://demo.icu-project.org/icu-bin/convexp 11 12 # IMPORTANT NOTE 13 # 14 # This file is not read directly by ICU. If you change it, you need to 15 # run gencnval, and eventually run pkgdata to update the representation that 16 # ICU uses for aliases. The gencnval tool will normally compile this file into 17 # cnvalias.icu. The gencnval -v verbose option will help you when you edit 18 # this file. 19 20 # Please be friendly to the rest of us that edit this table by 21 # keeping this table free of tabs. 22 23 # This is an alias file used by the character set converter. 24 # A lot of converter information can be found in unicode/ucnv.h, but here 25 # is more information about this file. 26 # 27 # If you are adding a new converter to this list and want to include it in the 28 # icu data library, please be sure to add an entry to the appropriate ucm*.mk file 29 # (see ucmfiles.mk for more information). 30 # 31 # Here is the file format using BNF-like syntax: 32 # 33 # converterTable ::= tags { converterLine* } 34 # converterLine ::= converterName [ tags ] { taggedAlias* }'\n' 35 # taggedAlias ::= alias [ tags ] 36 # tags ::= '{' { tag+ } '}' 37 # tag ::= standard['*'] 38 # converterName ::= [0-9a-zA-Z:_'-']+ 39 # alias ::= converterName 40 # 41 # Except for the converter name, aliases are case insensitive. 42 # Names are separated by whitespace. 43 # Line continuation and comment sytax are similar to the GNU make syntax. 44 # Any lines beginning with whitespace (e.g. U+0020 SPACE or U+0009 HORIZONTAL 45 # TABULATION) are presumed to be a continuation of the previous line. 46 # The # symbol starts a comment and the comment continues till the end of 47 # the line. 48 # 49 # The converter 50 # 51 # All names can be tagged by including a space-separated list of tags in 52 # curly braces, as in ISO_8859-1:1987{IANA*} iso-8859-1 { MIME* } or 53 # some-charset{MIME* IANA*}. The order of tags does not matter, and 54 # whitespace is allowed between the tagged name and the tags list. 55 # 56 # The tags can be used to get standard names using ucnv_getStandardName(). 57 # 58 # The complete list of recognized tags used in this file is defined in 59 # the affinity list near the beginning of the file. 60 # 61 # The * after the standard tag denotes that the previous alias is the 62 # preferred (default) charset name for that standard. There can only 63 # be one of these default charset names per converter. 64 65 66 67 # The world is getting more complicated... 68 # Supporting XML parsers, HTML, MIME, and similar applications 69 # that mark encodings with a charset name can be difficult. 70 # Many of these applications and operating systems will update 71 # their codepages over time. 72 73 # It means that a new codepage, one that differs from an 74 # old one by changing a code point, e.g., to the Euro sign, 75 # must not get an old alias, because it would mean that 76 # old files with this alias would be interpreted differently. 77 78 # If an codepage gets updated by assigning characters to previously 79 # unassigned code points, then a new name is not necessary. 80 # Also, some codepages map unassigned codepage byte values 81 # to the same numbers in Unicode for roundtripping. It may be 82 # industry practice to keep the encoding name in such a case, too 83 # (example: Windows codepages). 84 85 # The aliases listed in the list of character sets 86 # that is maintained by the IANA (http://www.iana.org/) must 87 # not be changed to mean encodings different from what this 88 # list shows. Currently, the IANA list is at 89 # http://www.iana.org/assignments/character-sets 90 # It should also be mentioned that the exact mapping table used for each 91 # IANA names usually isn't specified. This means that some other applications 92 # and operating systems are left to interpret the exact mappings for the 93 # underspecified aliases. For instance, Shift-JIS on a Solaris platform 94 # may be different from Shift-JIS on a Windows platform. This is why 95 # some of the aliases can be tagged to differentiate different mapping 96 # tables with the same alias. If an alias is given to more than one converter, 97 # it is considered to be an ambiguous alias, and the affinity list will 98 # choose the converter to use when a standard isn't specified with the alias. 99 100 # Name matching is case-insensitive. Also, dashes '-', underscores '_' 101 # and spaces ' ' are ignored in names (thus cs-iso_latin-1, csisolatin1 102 # and "cs iso latin 1" are the same). 103 # However, the names in the left column are directly file names 104 # or names of algorithmic converters, and their case must not 105 # be changed - or else code and/or file names must also be changed. 106 # For example, the converter ibm-921 is expected to be the file ibm-921.cnv. 107 108 109 110 # The immediately following list is the affinity list of supported standard tags. 111 # When multiple converters have the same alias under different standards, 112 # the standard nearest to the top of this list with that alias will 113 # be the first converter that will be opened. The ordering of the aliases 114 # after this affinity list does not affect the preferred alias, but it may 115 # affect the order of the returned list of aliases for a given converter. 116 # 117 # The general ordering is from specific and frequently used to more general 118 # or rarely used at the bottom. 119 { UTR22 # Name format specified by http://www.unicode.org/unicode/reports/tr22/ 120 # ICU # Can also use ICU_FEATURE 121 IBM # The IBM CCSID number is specified by ibm-* 122 WINDOWS # The Microsoft code page identifier number is specified by windows-*. The rest are recognized IE names. 123 JAVA # Source: Sun JDK. Alias name case is ignored, but dashes are not ignored. 124 # GLIBC 125 # AIX 126 # DB2 127 # SOLARIS 128 # APPLE 129 # HPUX 130 IANA # Source: http://www.iana.org/assignments/character-sets 131 MIME # Source: http://www.iana.org/assignments/character-sets 132 # MSIE # MSIE is Internet Explorer, which can be different from Windows (From the IMultiLanguage COM interface) 133 # ZOS_USS # z/OS (os/390) Unix System Services (USS), which has NL<->LF swapping. They have the same format as the IBM tag. 134 } 135 136 137 138 # Fully algorithmic converters 139 140 UTF-8 { IANA* MIME* JAVA* WINDOWS } 141 ibm-1208 { IBM* } # UTF-8 with IBM PUA 142 ibm-1209 { IBM } # UTF-8 143 ibm-5304 { IBM } # Unicode 2.0, UTF-8 with IBM PUA 144 ibm-5305 { IBM } # Unicode 2.0, UTF-8 145 ibm-13496 { IBM } # Unicode 3.0, UTF-8 with IBM PUA 146 ibm-13497 { IBM } # Unicode 3.0, UTF-8 147 ibm-17592 { IBM } # Unicode 4.0, UTF-8 with IBM PUA 148 ibm-17593 { IBM } # Unicode 4.0, UTF-8 149 windows-65001 { WINDOWS* } 150 cp1208 151 x-UTF_8J 152 unicode-1-1-utf-8 153 unicode-2-0-utf-8 154 155 # The ICU 2.2 UTF-16/32 converters detect and write a BOM. 156 UTF-16 { IANA* MIME* JAVA* } ISO-10646-UCS-2 { IANA } 157 ibm-1204 { IBM* } # UTF-16 with IBM PUA and BOM sensitive 158 ibm-1205 { IBM } # UTF-16 BOM sensitive 159 unicode 160 csUnicode 161 ucs-2 162 # The following Unicode CCSIDs (IBM) are not valid in ICU because they are 163 # considered pure DBCS (exactly 2 bytes) of Unicode, 164 # and they are a subset of Unicode. ICU does not support their encoding structures. 165 # 1400 1401 1402 1410 1414 1415 1446 1447 1448 1449 64770 64771 65520 5496 5497 5498 9592 13688 166 UTF-16BE { IANA* MIME* JAVA* } x-utf-16be { JAVA } 167 UnicodeBigUnmarked { JAVA } # java.io name 168 ibm-1200 { IBM* } # UTF-16 BE with IBM PUA 169 ibm-1201 { IBM } # UTF-16 BE 170 ibm-13488 { IBM } # Unicode 2.0, UTF-16 BE with IBM PUA 171 ibm-13489 { IBM } # Unicode 2.0, UTF-16 BE 172 ibm-17584 { IBM } # Unicode 3.0, UTF-16 BE with IBM PUA 173 ibm-17585 { IBM } # Unicode 3.0, UTF-16 BE 174 ibm-21680 { IBM } # Unicode 4.0, UTF-16 BE with IBM PUA 175 ibm-21681 { IBM } # Unicode 4.0, UTF-16 BE 176 ibm-25776 { IBM } # Unicode 4.1, UTF-16 BE with IBM PUA 177 ibm-25777 { IBM } # Unicode 4.1, UTF-16 BE 178 ibm-29872 { IBM } # Unicode 5.0, UTF-16 BE with IBM PUA 179 ibm-29873 { IBM } # Unicode 5.0, UTF-16 BE 180 ibm-61955 { IBM } # UTF-16BE with Gaidai University (Japan) PUA 181 ibm-61956 { IBM } # UTF-16BE with Microsoft HKSCS-Big 5 PUA 182 windows-1201 { WINDOWS* } 183 cp1200 184 cp1201 185 UTF16_BigEndian 186 # ibm-5297 { IBM } # Unicode 2.0, UTF-16 (BE) (reserved, never used) 187 # iso-10646-ucs-2 { JAVA } # This is ambiguous 188 # ibm-61952 is not a valid CCSID because it's Unicode 1.1 189 # ibm-61953 is not a valid CCSID because it's Unicode 1.0 190 UTF-16LE { IANA* MIME* JAVA* } x-utf-16le { JAVA } 191 UnicodeLittleUnmarked { JAVA } # java.io name 192 ibm-1202 { IBM* } # UTF-16 LE with IBM PUA 193 ibm-1203 { IBM } # UTF-16 LE 194 ibm-13490 { IBM } # Unicode 2.0, UTF-16 LE with IBM PUA 195 ibm-13491 { IBM } # Unicode 2.0, UTF-16 LE 196 ibm-17586 { IBM } # Unicode 3.0, UTF-16 LE with IBM PUA 197 ibm-17587 { IBM } # Unicode 3.0, UTF-16 LE 198 ibm-21682 { IBM } # Unicode 4.0, UTF-16 LE with IBM PUA 199 ibm-21683 { IBM } # Unicode 4.0, UTF-16 LE 200 ibm-25778 { IBM } # Unicode 4.1, UTF-16 LE with IBM PUA 201 ibm-25779 { IBM } # Unicode 4.1, UTF-16 LE 202 ibm-29874 { IBM } # Unicode 5.0, UTF-16 LE with IBM PUA 203 ibm-29875 { IBM } # Unicode 5.0, UTF-16 LE 204 UTF16_LittleEndian 205 windows-1200 { WINDOWS* } 206 207 UTF-32 { IANA* MIME* } ISO-10646-UCS-4 { IANA } 208 ibm-1236 { IBM* } # UTF-32 with IBM PUA and BOM sensitive 209 ibm-1237 { IBM } # UTF-32 BOM sensitive 210 csUCS4 211 ucs-4 212 UTF-32BE { IANA* } UTF32_BigEndian 213 ibm-1232 { IBM* } # UTF-32 BE with IBM PUA 214 ibm-1233 { IBM } # UTF-32 BE 215 ibm-9424 { IBM } # Unicode 4.1, UTF-32 BE with IBM PUA 216 UTF-32LE { IANA* } UTF32_LittleEndian 217 ibm-1234 { IBM* } # UTF-32 LE, with IBM PUA 218 ibm-1235 { IBM } # UTF-32 LE 219 220 # ICU-specific names for special uses 221 UTF16_PlatformEndian 222 UTF16_OppositeEndian 223 224 UTF32_PlatformEndian 225 UTF32_OppositeEndian 226 227 228 # Java-specific, non-Unicode-standard UTF-16 variants. 229 # These are in the Java "Basic Encoding Set (contained in lib/rt.jar)". 230 # See the "Supported Encodings" at 231 # http://java.sun.com/javase/6/docs/technotes/guides/intl/encoding.doc.html 232 # or a newer version of this document. 233 # 234 # Aliases marked with { JAVA* } are canonical names for java.io and java.lang APIs. 235 # Aliases marked with { JAVA } are canonical names for the java.nio API. 236 # 237 # "BOM" means the Unicode Byte Order Mark, which is the encoding-scheme-specific 238 # byte sequence for U+FEFF. 239 # "Reverse BOM" means the BOM for the sibling encoding scheme with the 240 # opposite endianness. (LE<->BE) 241 242 # "Sixteen-bit Unicode (or UCS) Transformation Format, big-endian byte order, 243 # with byte-order mark" 244 # 245 # From Unicode: Writes BOM. 246 # To Unicode: Detects and consumes BOM. 247 # If there is a "reverse BOM", Java throws 248 # MalformedInputException: Incorrect byte-order mark. 249 # In this case, ICU4C sets a U_ILLEGAL_ESCAPE_SEQUENCE UErrorCode value 250 # and a UCNV_ILLEGAL UConverterCallbackReason. 251 UTF-16BE,version=1 UnicodeBig { JAVA* } 252 253 # "Sixteen-bit Unicode (or UCS) Transformation Format, little-endian byte order, 254 # with byte-order mark" 255 # 256 # From Unicode: Writes BOM. 257 # To Unicode: Detects and consumes BOM. 258 # If there is a "reverse BOM", Java throws 259 # MalformedInputException: Incorrect byte-order mark. 260 # In this case, ICU4C sets a U_ILLEGAL_ESCAPE_SEQUENCE UErrorCode value 261 # and a UCNV_ILLEGAL UConverterCallbackReason. 262 UTF-16LE,version=1 UnicodeLittle { JAVA* } x-UTF-16LE-BOM { JAVA } 263 264 # This one is not mentioned on the "Supported Encodings" page 265 # but is available in Java. 266 # In Java, this is called "Unicode" but we cannot give it that alias 267 # because the standard UTF-16 converter already has a "unicode" alias. 268 # 269 # From Unicode: Writes BOM. 270 # To Unicode: Detects and consumes BOM. 271 # If there is no BOM, rather than defaulting to BE, Java throws 272 # MalformedInputException: Missing byte-order mark. 273 # In this case, ICU4C sets a U_ILLEGAL_ESCAPE_SEQUENCE UErrorCode value 274 # and a UCNV_ILLEGAL UConverterCallbackReason. 275 UTF-16,version=1 276 277 # This is the same as standard UTF-16 but always writes a big-endian byte stream, 278 # regardless of the platform endianness, as expected by the Java compatibility tests. 279 # See the java.nio.charset.Charset API documentation at 280 # http://java.sun.com/javase/6/docs/api/java/nio/charset/Charset.html 281 # or a newer version of this document. 282 # 283 # From Unicode: Write BE BOM and BE bytes 284 # To Unicode: Detects and consumes BOM. Defaults to BE. 285 UTF-16,version=2 286 287 # Note: ICU does not currently support Java-specific, non-Unicode-standard UTF-32 variants. 288 # Presumably, these behave analogously to the UTF-16 variants with similar names. 289 # UTF_32BE_BOM x-UTF-32BE-BOM 290 # UTF_32LE_BOM x-UTF-32LE-BOM 291 292 # End of Java-specific, non-Unicode-standard UTF variants. 293 294 295 # Chrome: Remove all the entries for UTF-7, SCSU, BOCU, CESU-8. 296 297 # Standard iso-8859-1, which does not have the Euro update. 298 # See iso-8859-15 (latin9) for the Euro update 299 ISO-8859-1 { MIME* IANA JAVA* } 300 ibm-819 { IBM* JAVA } # This is not truely ibm-819 because it's missing the fallbacks. 301 IBM819 { IANA } 302 cp819 { IANA JAVA } 303 latin1 { IANA JAVA } 304 8859_1 { JAVA } 305 csISOLatin1 { IANA JAVA } 306 iso-ir-100 { IANA JAVA } 307 ISO_8859-1:1987 { IANA* JAVA } 308 l1 { IANA JAVA } 309 819 { JAVA } 310 # windows-28591 { WINDOWS* } # This has odd behavior because it has the Euro update, which isn't correct. 311 # LATIN_1 # Old ICU name 312 # ANSI_X3.110-1983 # This is for a different IANA alias. This isn't iso-8859-1. 313 314 US-ASCII { MIME* IANA JAVA WINDOWS } 315 ASCII { JAVA* IANA WINDOWS } 316 ANSI_X3.4-1968 { IANA* WINDOWS } 317 ANSI_X3.4-1986 { IANA WINDOWS } 318 ISO_646.irv:1991 { IANA WINDOWS } 319 iso_646.irv:1983 { JAVA } 320 ISO646-US { JAVA IANA WINDOWS } 321 us { IANA } 322 csASCII { IANA WINDOWS } 323 iso-ir-6 { IANA } 324 cp367 { IANA WINDOWS } 325 ascii7 { JAVA } 326 646 { JAVA } 327 windows-20127 { WINDOWS* } 328 ibm-367 { IBM* } IBM367 { IANA WINDOWS } # This is not truely ibm-367 because it's missing the fallbacks. 329 330 # GB 18030 is partly algorithmic, using the MBCS converter 331 # Chrome: HTML5 GBK an alias for GB18030 332 # TODO(jshin): Decide if Chrome should follow spec. crbug.com/339862 333 gb18030 { IANA* } ibm-1392 { IBM* } windows-54936 { WINDOWS* } gb18030 { MIME* } 334 335 # Table-based interchange codepages 336 337 # Central Europe 338 ibm-912_P100-1995 { UTR22* } 339 ibm-912 { IBM* JAVA } 340 ISO-8859-2 { MIME* IANA JAVA* WINDOWS } 341 ISO_8859-2:1987 { IANA* WINDOWS JAVA } 342 latin2 { IANA WINDOWS JAVA } 343 csISOLatin2 { IANA WINDOWS JAVA } 344 iso-ir-101 { IANA WINDOWS JAVA } 345 l2 { IANA WINDOWS JAVA } 346 8859_2 { JAVA } 347 cp912 { JAVA } 348 912 { JAVA } 349 windows-28592 { WINDOWS* } 350 351 # Maltese Esperanto 352 ibm-913_P100-2000 { UTR22* } 353 ibm-913 { IBM* JAVA } 354 ISO-8859-3 { MIME* IANA WINDOWS JAVA* } 355 ISO_8859-3:1988 { IANA* WINDOWS JAVA } 356 latin3 { IANA JAVA WINDOWS } 357 csISOLatin3 { IANA WINDOWS } 358 iso-ir-109 { IANA WINDOWS JAVA } 359 l3 { IANA WINDOWS JAVA } 360 8859_3 { JAVA } 361 cp913 { JAVA } 362 913 { JAVA } 363 windows-28593 { WINDOWS* } 364 365 # Baltic 366 ibm-914_P100-1995 { UTR22* } 367 ibm-914 { IBM* JAVA } 368 ISO-8859-4 { MIME* IANA WINDOWS JAVA* } 369 latin4 { IANA WINDOWS JAVA } 370 csISOLatin4 { IANA WINDOWS JAVA } 371 iso-ir-110 { IANA WINDOWS JAVA } 372 ISO_8859-4:1988 { IANA* WINDOWS JAVA } 373 l4 { IANA WINDOWS JAVA } 374 8859_4 { JAVA } 375 cp914 { JAVA } 376 914 { JAVA } 377 windows-28594 { WINDOWS* } 378 379 # Cyrillic 380 ibm-915_P100-1995 { UTR22* } 381 ibm-915 { IBM* JAVA } 382 ISO-8859-5 { MIME* IANA WINDOWS JAVA* } 383 cyrillic { IANA WINDOWS JAVA } 384 csISOLatinCyrillic { IANA WINDOWS JAVA } 385 iso-ir-144 { IANA WINDOWS JAVA } 386 ISO_8859-5:1988 { IANA* WINDOWS JAVA } 387 8859_5 { JAVA } 388 cp915 { JAVA } 389 915 { JAVA } 390 windows-28595 { WINDOWS* } 391 392 # Arabic 393 # ISO_8859-6-E and ISO_8859-6-I are similar to this charset, but BiDi is done differently 394 # From a narrow mapping point of view, there is no difference. 395 # -E means explicit. -I means implicit. 396 # -E requires the client to handle the ISO 6429 bidirectional controls 397 ibm-1089_P100-1995 { UTR22* } 398 ibm-1089 { IBM* JAVA } 399 ISO-8859-6 { MIME* IANA WINDOWS JAVA* } 400 arabic { IANA WINDOWS JAVA } 401 csISOLatinArabic { IANA WINDOWS JAVA } 402 iso-ir-127 { IANA WINDOWS JAVA } 403 ISO_8859-6:1987 { IANA* WINDOWS JAVA } 404 ECMA-114 { IANA JAVA } 405 ASMO-708 { IANA JAVA } 406 8859_6 { JAVA } 407 cp1089 { JAVA } 408 1089 { JAVA } 409 windows-28596 { WINDOWS* } 410 ISO-8859-6-I { IANA MIME } # IANA considers this alias different and BiDi needs to be applied. 411 ISO-8859-6-E { IANA MIME } # IANA considers this alias different and BiDi needs to be applied. 412 x-ISO-8859-6S { JAVA } 413 414 # ISO Greek (with euro update). This is really ISO_8859-7:2003 415 ibm-9005_X110-2007 { UTR22* } 416 ibm-9005 { IBM* } 417 ISO-8859-7 { MIME* IANA JAVA* WINDOWS } 418 8859_7 { JAVA } 419 greek { IANA JAVA WINDOWS } 420 greek8 { IANA JAVA WINDOWS } 421 ELOT_928 { IANA JAVA WINDOWS } 422 ECMA-118 { IANA JAVA WINDOWS } 423 csISOLatinGreek { IANA JAVA WINDOWS } 424 iso-ir-126 { IANA JAVA WINDOWS } 425 ISO_8859-7:1987 { IANA* JAVA WINDOWS } 426 windows-28597 { WINDOWS* } 427 sun_eu_greek # For Solaris 428 429 # hebrew 430 # ISO_8859-8-E and ISO_8859-8-I are similar to this charset, but BiDi is done differently 431 # From a narrow mapping point of view, there is no difference. 432 # -E means explicit. -I means implicit. 433 # -E requires the client to handle the ISO 6429 bidirectional controls 434 # This matches the official mapping on unicode.org 435 ibm-5012_P100-1999 { UTR22* } 436 ibm-5012 { IBM* } 437 ISO-8859-8 { MIME* IANA WINDOWS JAVA* } 438 hebrew { IANA WINDOWS JAVA } 439 csISOLatinHebrew { IANA WINDOWS JAVA } 440 iso-ir-138 { IANA WINDOWS JAVA } 441 ISO_8859-8:1988 { IANA* WINDOWS JAVA } 442 ISO-8859-8-I { IANA MIME } # IANA and Windows considers this alias different and BiDi needs to be applied. 443 ISO-8859-8-E { IANA MIME } # IANA and Windows considers this alias different and BiDi needs to be applied. 444 8859_8 { JAVA } 445 windows-28598 { WINDOWS* } # Hebrew (ISO-Visual). A hybrid between ibm-5012 and ibm-916 with extra PUA mappings. 446 hebrew8 # Reflect HP-UX code page update 447 448 # Turkish 449 # Chrome: ISO-8859-9 and its aliases are moved to windows-1254 per 450 # HTML5. 451 ibm-920_P100-1995 { UTR22* } 452 ibm-920 { IBM* JAVA } 453 ISO-8859-9 454 latin5 455 csISOLatin5 456 iso-ir-148 457 ISO_8859-9:1989 458 l5 459 cp920 { JAVA } 460 920 { JAVA } 461 windows-28599 { WINDOWS* } 462 ECMA-128 # IANA doesn't have this alias 6/24/2002 463 turkish8 # Reflect HP-UX codepage update 8/1/2008 464 turkish # Reflect HP-UX codepage update 8/1/2008 465 466 # Nordic languages 467 iso-8859_10-1998 { UTR22* } ISO-8859-10 { MIME* IANA* } 468 iso-ir-157 { IANA } 469 l6 { IANA } 470 ISO_8859-10:1992 { IANA } 471 csISOLatin6 { IANA } 472 latin6 { IANA } 473 474 # Thai 475 # Be warned. There several iso-8859-11 codepage variants, and they are all incompatible. 476 # ISO-8859-11 is a superset of TIS-620. The difference is that ISO-8859-11 contains the C1 control codes. 477 iso-8859_11-2001 { UTR22* } ISO-8859-11 478 thai8 # HP-UX alias. HP-UX says TIS-620, but it's closer to ISO-8859-11. 479 x-iso-8859-11 { JAVA* } 480 481 # iso-8859-13, PC Baltic (w/o euro update) 482 ibm-921_P100-1995 { UTR22* } 483 ibm-921 { IBM* } 484 ISO-8859-13 { IANA* MIME* JAVA* } 485 8859_13 { JAVA } 486 windows-28603 { WINDOWS* } 487 cp921 488 921 489 x-IBM921 { JAVA } 490 491 # Celtic 492 iso-8859_14-1998 { UTR22* } ISO-8859-14 { IANA* } 493 iso-ir-199 { IANA } 494 ISO_8859-14:1998 { IANA } 495 latin8 { IANA } 496 iso-celtic { IANA } 497 l8 { IANA } 498 499 # Latin 9 500 ibm-923_P100-1998 { UTR22* } 501 ibm-923 { IBM* JAVA } 502 ISO-8859-15 { IANA* MIME* WINDOWS JAVA* } 503 Latin-9 { IANA WINDOWS } 504 l9 { WINDOWS } 505 8859_15 { JAVA } 506 latin0 { JAVA } 507 csisolatin0 { JAVA } 508 csisolatin9 { JAVA } 509 iso8859_15_fdis { JAVA } 510 cp923 { JAVA } 511 923 { JAVA } 512 windows-28605 { WINDOWS* } 513 514 # CJK encodings 515 516 # Chrome: Instead of ibm-943_P15A-2003, we use what's specified in the WHATWG 517 # encoding standard (HTML5) for Shift_JIS. Keep all the aliases (even though 518 not all of them not required by the encoding spec) for now. 519 520 shift_jis-html5 { UTR22* } 521 ibm-943 # Leave untagged because this isn't the default 522 Shift_JIS { IANA* MIME* WINDOWS JAVA } 523 MS_Kanji { IANA WINDOWS JAVA } 524 csShiftJIS { IANA WINDOWS JAVA } 525 windows-31j { IANA JAVA } # A further extension of Shift_JIS to include NEC special characters (Row 13) 526 csWindows31J { IANA WINDOWS JAVA } # A further extension of Shift_JIS to include NEC special characters (Row 13) 527 x-sjis { WINDOWS JAVA } 528 x-ms-cp932 { WINDOWS } 529 cp932 { WINDOWS } 530 windows-932 { WINDOWS* } 531 cp943c { JAVA* } # This is slightly different, but the backslash mapping is the same. 532 IBM-943C #{ AIX* } # Add this tag once AIX aliases becomes available 533 ms932 534 pck # Probably SOLARIS 535 sjis # This might be for ibm-1351 536 ibm-943_VSUB_VPUA 537 x-MS932_0213 { JAVA } 538 x-JISAutoDetect { JAVA } 539 540 # Chrome: Instead of ibm-33722_P*, we use what's specified in the WHATWG 541 # encoding standard (HTML5). All the 542 # 3-byte seqeunces in the normative EUC-JP are now decode-only. 543 euc-jp-html5 { UTR22* } 544 EUC-JP { MIME* IANA JAVA* WINDOWS*} 545 Extended_UNIX_Code_Packed_Format_for_Japanese { IANA* JAVA WINDOWS } 546 csEUCPkdFmtJapanese { IANA JAVA WINDOWS } 547 windows-51932 { WINDOWS } 548 X-EUC-JP { MIME JAVA WINDOWS } # Japan EUC. x-euc-jp is a MIME name 549 eucjis {JAVA} 550 ujis # Linux sometimes uses this name. This is an unfortunate generic and rarely used name. Its use is discouraged. 551 552 553 windows-950-2000 { UTR22* } 554 Big5 { IANA* MIME* JAVA* WINDOWS } 555 csBig5 { IANA WINDOWS } 556 windows-950 { WINDOWS* } 557 x-windows-950 { JAVA } 558 x-big5 559 ms950 560 ibm-1375_P100-2007 { UTR22* } # Big5-HKSCS-2004 with Unicode 3.1 mappings. This uses supplementary characters. 561 ibm-1375 { IBM* } 562 Big5-HKSCS { IANA* JAVA* } 563 big5hk { JAVA } 564 HKSCS-BIG5 # From http://www.openi18n.org/localenameguide/ 565 566 # Chrome: HTML5 has big5-hkscs as an alias for big5 567 # TODO(jshin): Decide if Chrome should follow spec. crbug.com/277040 568 ibm-5471_P100-2006 { UTR22* } # Big5-HKSCS-2001 with Unicode 3.0 mappings. This uses many PUA characters. 569 ibm-5471 { IBM* } 570 Big5-HKSCS 571 MS950_HKSCS { JAVA* } 572 hkbig5 # from HP-UX 11i, which can't handle supplementary characters. 573 big5-hkscs:unicode3.0 574 x-MS950-HKSCS { JAVA } 575 # windows-950 # Windows-950 can be w/ or w/o HKSCS extensions. By default it's not. 576 # windows-950_hkscs 577 # GBK 578 # Chrome: Added 4 GB2312 aliases and EUC-CN to Windows-936 to reflect the 579 # reality of the web (GB2312 is treated synonymously with its 580 # superset, Windows-936/GBK) 581 # All the aliases listed for this converter (windows-936-2000) 582 # are removed from the list of aliases for other simplified Chinese 583 # converters above. 584 # HTML5 makes GBK an alias for GB18030 585 # TODO(jshin): Decide if Chrome should follow spec. crbug.com/339862 586 windows-936-2000 { UTR22* } 587 GB2312 { IANA MIME } 588 GBK { IANA* MIME* WINDOWS JAVA* } 589 CP936 { IANA JAVA } 590 MS936 { IANA } # In JDK 1.5, this goes to x-mswin-936. This is an IANA name split. 591 windows-936 { IANA WINDOWS* JAVA } 592 chinese { IANA } 593 iso-ir-58 { IANA } 594 gb2312-1980 595 EUC-CN 596 csGB2312 { IANA } 597 GB_2312-80 { IANA } 598 599 600 # Chrome: ibm-5478 and ibm-949 are replaced by noop-gb2312_gl and windows-949 601 # (ksc_5601), respectively, in ucnv2022.c 602 603 # Korean EUC. 604 605 # Chrome: Windows-949 is not EUC-KR, but a superset of EUC-KR with 8,822 606 # additional Hangul syllables. However, the reality of the web 607 # and HTML5 require that we treat EUC-KR a 608 # synonym of windows-949. 609 # All the aliases listed for this converter (windows-949-2000) 610 # are removed from the list of aliases for other Korean converters 611 # above. 612 windows-949-2000 { UTR22* } 613 windows-949 { JAVA* WINDOWS* } 614 EUC-KR { IANA* MIME* WINDOWS } 615 KS_C_5601-1987 { WINDOWS IANA } 616 KS_C_5601-1989 { WINDOWS IANA } 617 KSC_5601 { IANA WINDOWS } # Needed by iso-2022 618 csKSC56011987 { WINDOWS } 619 korean { IANA WINDOWS } 620 iso-ir-149 { IANA WINDOWS } 621 csEUCKR { IANA WINDOWS } 622 623 #Chrome: TIS-620, ISO-8859-11 and Windows-874 are slightly different from 624 # each other, but they're used as if they're identical on the web. This is 625 # also per HTML5. 626 windows-874-2000 { UTR22* } # Thai (w/ euro update) 627 TIS-620 { IANA* WINDOWS MIME* } 628 windows-874 { JAVA* WINDOWS* MIME } 629 MS874 { JAVA } 630 x-windows-874 { JAVA } 631 iso-8859-11 { IANA WINDOWS MIME } # iso-8859-11 is similar to TIS-620. ibm-13162 is a closer match. 632 633 # Platform codepages 634 # Chrome: only keep ibm-878 for KOI8-R, ibm-1168 for KOI8-RU and ibm-866 635 ibm-878_P100-1996 { UTR22* } ibm-878 { IBM* } KOI8-R { IANA* MIME* WINDOWS JAVA* } koi8 { WINDOWS JAVA } csKOI8R { IANA WINDOWS JAVA } windows-20866 { WINDOWS* } cp878 # Russian internet 636 # Chrome: Use the table from the WHATWG encoding standard (HTML5). 637 ibm-866_html5-2012 { UTR22* } ibm-866 { IBM* } IBM866 { IANA* MIME* JAVA } cp866 { IANA MIME WINDOWS JAVA* } 866 { IANA JAVA } csIBM866 { IANA JAVA } # PC Russian (w/o euro update) 638 ibm-1168_P100-2002 { UTR22* } ibm-1168 { IBM* } KOI8-U { IANA* WINDOWS } windows-21866 { WINDOWS* } # Ukrainian KOI8. koi8-ru != KOI8-U and Microsoft is wrong for aliasing them as the same. 639 640 # The cp aliases in this section aren't really windows aliases, but it was used by ICU for Windows. 641 # cp is usually used to denote IBM in Java, and that is why we don't do that anymore. 642 # The windows-* aliases mean windows codepages. 643 ibm-5346_P100-1998 { UTR22* } ibm-5346 { IBM* } windows-1250 { IANA* JAVA* WINDOWS* } cp1250 { WINDOWS JAVA } # Windows Latin2 (w/ euro update) 644 ibm-5347_P100-1998 { UTR22* } ibm-5347 { IBM* } windows-1251 { IANA* JAVA* WINDOWS* } cp1251 { WINDOWS JAVA } ANSI1251 # Windows Cyrillic (w/ euro update). ANSI1251 is from Solaris 645 ibm-5348_P100-1997 { UTR22* } ibm-5348 { IBM* } windows-1252 { IANA* JAVA* WINDOWS* } cp1252 { JAVA } # Windows Latin1 (w/ euro update) 646 ibm-5349_P100-1998 { UTR22* } ibm-5349 { IBM* } windows-1253 { IANA* JAVA* WINDOWS* } cp1253 { JAVA } # Windows Greek (w/ euro update) 647 648 #CHROME : Make ISO-8859-9 an alias to windows-1254 per HTML5. Move 649 # other IANA aliases for ISO-8859-9 as well. 650 ibm-5350_P100-1998 { UTR22* } ibm-5350 { IBM* } windows-1254 { MIME* IANA* JAVA* WINDOWS* } cp1254 { JAVA } # Windows Turkish (w/ euro update) 651 ISO-8859-9 { MIME } 652 latin5 { IANA } 653 csISOLatin5 { IANA } 654 iso-ir-148 { IANA } 655 ISO_8859-9:1989 { IANA } 656 l5 { IANA } 657 8859_9 { JAVA } 658 ibm-9447_P100-2002 { UTR22* } ibm-9447 { IBM* } windows-1255 { IANA* JAVA* WINDOWS* } cp1255 { JAVA } # Windows Hebrew (w/ euro update) 659 ibm-9448_X100-2005 { UTR22* } ibm-9448 { IBM* } windows-1256 { IANA* JAVA* WINDOWS* } cp1256 { WINDOWS JAVA } x-windows-1256S { JAVA } # Windows Arabic (w/ euro update) 660 ibm-9449_P100-2002 { UTR22* } ibm-9449 { IBM* } windows-1257 { IANA* JAVA* WINDOWS* } cp1257 { JAVA } # Windows Baltic (w/ euro update) 661 ibm-5354_P100-1998 { UTR22* } ibm-5354 { IBM* } windows-1258 { IANA* JAVA* WINDOWS* } cp1258 { JAVA } # Windows Vietnamese (w/ euro update) 662 663 # Chrome: Only MacRoman and MacCyrillic are necessary for HTML5. 664 macos-0_2-10.2 { UTR22* } macintosh { IANA* MIME* WINDOWS } mac { IANA } csMacintosh { IANA } windows-10000 { WINDOWS* } macroman { JAVA } x-macroman { JAVA* } # Apple latin 1 665 macos-7_3-10.2 { UTR22* } x-mac-cyrillic { MIME* WINDOWS } windows-10007 { WINDOWS* } mac-cyrillic maccy x-MacCyrillic { JAVA } x-MacUkraine { JAVA* } # Apple Cyrillic 666 667 # Partially algorithmic converters 668 669 # [U_ENABLE_GENERIC_ISO_2022] 670 # The _generic_ ISO-2022 converter is disabled starting 2003-dec-03 (ICU 2.8). 671 # For details see the icu mailing list from 2003-dec-01 and the ucnv2022.c file. 672 # Language-specific variants of ISO-2022 continue to be available as listed below. 673 # ISO_2022 ISO-2022 674 675 # Chrome: The encoding standard only supports ISO-2022-JP and HZ-GB. 676 # Keep ISO-2022-{KR,CN,CN-Ext} until we're sure what to do about 677 # replacement encodings. See crbug.com/277037 678 # TODO(jshin): Remove them when the bug is resolved. 679 ISO_2022,locale=ja,version=0 ISO-2022-JP { IANA* MIME* JAVA* } csISO2022JP { IANA JAVA } x-windows-iso2022jp { JAVA } x-windows-50220 { JAVA } 680 ISO_2022,locale=ko,version=0 ISO-2022-KR { IANA* MIME* JAVA* } csISO2022KR { IANA JAVA } # This uses ibm-949 681 ISO_2022,locale=zh,version=0 ISO-2022-CN { IANA* JAVA* } csISO2022CN { JAVA } x-ISO-2022-CN-GB { JAVA } 682 ISO_2022,locale=zh,version=1 ISO-2022-CN-EXT { IANA* } 683 HZ HZ-GB-2312 { IANA* } 684 685 # Chrome: HTML5 does not need ISCII. 686 # Remove all Lotus entries as well. 687 688 # EBCDIC codepages according to the CDRA 689 # Chrome: Removed all EBCDIC code pages. 690 691 # These are not installed by default. They are rarely used. 692 # Many of them can be added through the online ICU Data Library Customization tool 693 # Chrome: Removed all these entries except for ISO-8859-16 required by HTML5. 694 695 iso-8859_16-2001 { UTR22* } ISO-8859-16 { IANA* } iso-ir-226 { IANA } ISO_8859-16:2001 { IANA } latin10 { IANA } l10 { IANA } 696 697