ITU T.61

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Short description: ITU-T Recommendation
T.61
Character repertoire and coded character sets for the international teletex service
StatusWithdrawn
Year started1980
Latest version(03/93)
March 1993
OrganizationITU-T
CommitteeStudy Group VIII
Related standardsT.51, ASN.1, X.500, X.509
Domainencoding
LicenseFreely available
Websitehttps://www.itu.int/rec/T-REC-T.61

T.61 is an ITU-T Recommendation for a Teletex character set. T.61 predated Unicode, and was the primary character set in ASN.1 used in early versions of X.500 and X.509 for encoding strings containing characters used in Western European languages.[1] It is also used by older versions of LDAP.[2] While T.61 continues to be supported in modern versions of X.500 and X.509, it has been deprecated in favor of Unicode. It is also called Code page 1036, CP1036, or IBM 01036.

While ASN.1 does see wide use and the T.61 character set is used on some standards using ASN.1 (for example in RSA Security's PKCS #9), the 1988-11 version of the T.61 standard itself was superseded by a never-published 1993-03 version; the 1993-03 version was withdrawn by the ITU-T.[3] The 1988-11 version is still available.[3]

T.61 was one of the encodings supported by Mozilla software in email and HTML until 2014, when the supported encodings were limited to those in the WHATWG Encoding Standard (although T.61 remained supported for LDAP).[4]

Code page layout

The following table maps the T.61 characters to their equivalent Unicode code points.

T.61-8bit[5][6][7][8]
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 A B C D E F
BS LF FF CR LS1 LS0
SUB ESC SS3[lower-alpha 1]
 SP  ! " % & ' ( ) * + , - . /
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 : ; < = > ?
@ A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O
P Q R S T U V W X Y Z [ ] _
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o
p q r s t u v w x y z | DEL
PLD PLU
CSI
NBSP ¡ ¢ £ $ ¥ # § ¤ «
° ± ² ³ × µ · ÷ » ¼ ½ ¾ ¿
◌̀ ◌́ ◌̂ ◌̃ ◌̄ ◌̆ ◌̇ ◌̈ ◌̊ ◌̧ ◌̲ ◌̋ ◌̨ ◌̌
Æ Ð ª Ħ IJ Ŀ Ł Ø Œ º Þ Ŧ Ŋ ʼn
ĸ æ đ ð ħ ı ij ŀ ł ø œ ß þ ŧ ŋ

See ITU T.51 for a description of how the accents at 0xC0..CF worked. They prefix the letters, as opposed to postfix used by Unicode.

See also

Footnotes

  1. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named ss2

References

External links