Subject: Re: [xsl] Character substitution From: Jim Fuller <jim.fuller@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Date: Mon, 10 Jan 2005 08:19:58 -0500 |
When Microsoft first introduced Windows-1252 they referred to it as "ANSI". I think this is because they had bought themselves a copy of ISO-8859-1, and ISO documents purchased in the USA are rebranded by ANSI, and this was the first document Microsoft had ever seen with "ANSI" on the cover, so they started calling it "the ANSI specification" (thinking, presumably, that there was only one), and then they continued calling it "ANSI" even after they had made changes to it.
This was all a long time ago, and Microsoft have since learned better, but only after sowing a lot of confusion among their users. I haven't seen Windows-1252 referred to as ANSI for a while now, but the term resurfaces from time to time.
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