Macintosh Latin encoding

Macintosh Latin is an obsolete character encoding which was used by Kermit (which as of 2022 supports Unicode UTF-8,[2] though not UTF-16) to represent text on the Apple Macintosh (but not by standard Mac OS fonts). It is a modification of Mac OS Icelandic[1] to include all characters in ISO/IEC 8859-1, DEC MCS, the PostScript Standard Encoding, and a Dutch ISO 646 variant[lower-alpha 1] (with ÿ or ij being a substitute for ij).[3] Although Macintosh Latin is designed to be compatible with the standard Macintosh Mac OS Roman encoding for the shared subset of characters, the two should not be confused.

Macintosh Latin
KermitMACINTOSH-LATIN
Created byKermit project
Current statusUsed by Kermit
Based onMac OS Icelandic[1]
Transforms / EncodesISO/IEC 8859-1, DEC MCS, PostScript Standard Encoding

Layout

Each character is shown with its equivalent Unicode code point. Only the second half of the table (code points 128255) is shown, the first half (code points 0127) being the same as ASCII.

Macintosh Latin
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 A B C D E F
8x Ä Å Ç É Ñ Ö Ü á à â ä ã å ç é è
9x ê ë í ì î ï ñ ó ò ô ö õ ú ù û ü
Ax Ý ° ¢ £ § × ß ® © ² ´ ¨ ³ Æ Ø
Bx ¹ ± ¼ ½ ¥ μ ¾ ª º æ ø
Cx ¿ ¡ ¬ Ł ƒ ˋ « » ¦ NBSP À Ã Õ Œ œ
Dx SHY ł ÷ ÿ Ÿ ¤ Ð ð Þ þ
Ex ý · Â Ê Á Ë È Í Î Ï Ì Ó Ô
Fx Ò Ú Û Ù ı ˆ ˜ ¯ ˘ ˙ ˚ ¸ ˝ ˛ ˇ
  Different from Mac OS Roman, matching Mac OS Icelandic
  Different from both Mac OS Icelandic and Mac OS Roman

See also

Footnotes

  1. The proposal mentions a "Dutch ISO 646 variant" contributing the Florin sign (ƒ). There is no Florin sign in Code page 1019, so it appears to mean Code page 1102.

References

  1. da Cruz, Frank (2010-04-02). "Kermit and MIME Character-Set Names". Kermit Project. Columbia University.
  2. "Kermit Character-Set Names". www.kermitproject.org. Retrieved 2022-10-26.
  3. "Macintosh Kermit code page".
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