1.2 Normative References
{references}
{bibliography}
The following standards contain provisions which,
through reference in this text, constitute provisions of this International
Standard. At the time of publication, the editions indicated were valid.
All standards are subject to revision, and parties to agreements based
on this International Standard are encouraged to investigate the possibility
of applying the most recent editions of the standards indicated below.
Members of IEC and ISO maintain registers of currently valid International
Standards.
{ISO/IEC 646:1991}
{646:1991, ISO/IEC
standard} {character
set standard (7-bit)} ISO/IEC 646:1991,
Information technology — ISO 7-bit coded character set for information
interchange.
{
AI95-00415-01}
{ISO/IEC 1539-1:2004} {1539-1:2004,
ISO/IEC standard} {Fortran
standard} ISO/IEC 1539-1:2004,
Information
technology — Programming languages — Fortran — Part
1: Base language.
{
AI95-00415-01}
{ISO 1989:2002} {1989:2002,
ISO standard} {COBOL
standard} ISO/IEC 1989:2002,
Information
technology — Programming languages — COBOL.
{ISO/IEC 6429:1992}
{6429:1992, ISO/IEC
standard} {character
set standard (control functions)} ISO/IEC
6429:1992,
Information technology — Control functions for coded
graphic character sets.
{
AI95-00351-01}
{ISO 8601:2004} {date
and time formatting standard} ISO 8601:2004,
Data elements and interchange formats — Information interchange
— Representation of dates and times.
{ISO/IEC 8859-1:1987}
{8859-1:1987, ISO/IEC
standard} {character
set standard (8-bit)} ISO/IEC 8859-1:1987,
Information processing — 8-bit single-byte coded character sets
— Part 1: Latin alphabet No. 1.
{
AI95-00415-01}
{ISO/IEC 9899:1999} {9899:1999,
ISO/IEC standard} {C
standard} ISO/IEC 9899:1999,
Programming
languages — C, supplemented by Technical Corrigendum 1:2001
and Technical Corrigendum 2:2004.
Discussion: Unlike Fortran and COBOL,
which added the Information technology prefix to the titles of
their standard, C did not. This was confirmed in the list of standards
titles on the ISO web site. No idea why ISO allowed that.
{
8652/0001}
{
AI95-00124-01}
{
AI95-00285-01}
{ISO/IEC 10646:2003} {10646:2003,
ISO/IEC standard} {character
set standard (16 and 32-bit)} ISO/IEC
10646:2003,
Information technology — Universal Multiple-Octet
Coded Character Set (UCS).
{
AI95-00376-01}
{ISO/IEC 14882:2003} {14882:2003,
ISO/IEC standard} {C++
standard} ISO/IEC 14882:2003,
Programming
languages — C++.
Discussion: This title is also missing
the Information technology part. That was confirmed in the list
of standards titles on the ISO web site.
{
AI95-00285-01}
{ISO/IEC TR 19769:2004} {19769:2004,
ISO/IEC technical report} ISO/IEC TR 19769:2004,
Information technology — Programming languages, their environments
and system software interfaces — Extensions for the programming
language C to support new character data types.
Discussion: {
POSIX}
POSIX,
Portable Operating System Interface (POSIX) — Part 1: System
Application Program Interface (API) [C Language], The Institute of
Electrical and Electronics Engineers, 1990.
Wording Changes from Ada 95