PRICES include / exclude VAT
Homepage>BS Standards>01 GENERALITIES. TERMINOLOGY. STANDARDIZATION. DOCUMENTATION>01.140 Information sciences. Publishing>01.140.20 Information sciences>BS EN 13710:2011 European Ordering Rules. Ordering of characters from Latin, Greek, Cyrillic, Georgian and Armenian scripts
Sponsored link
immediate downloadReleased: 2011-03-31
BS EN 13710:2011 European Ordering Rules. Ordering of characters from Latin, Greek, Cyrillic, Georgian and Armenian scripts

BS EN 13710:2011

European Ordering Rules. Ordering of characters from Latin, Greek, Cyrillic, Georgian and Armenian scripts

Format
Availability
Price and currency
English Secure PDF
Immediate download
370.26 EUR
You can read the standard for 1 hour. More information in the category: E-reading
Reading the standard
for 1 hour
37.03 EUR
You can read the standard for 24 hours. More information in the category: E-reading
Reading the standard
for 24 hours
111.08 EUR
English Hardcopy
In stock
370.26 EUR
Standard number:BS EN 13710:2011
Pages:56
Released:2011-03-31
ISBN:978 0 580 69139 3
Status:Standard
DESCRIPTION

BS EN 13710:2011


This standard BS EN 13710:2011 European Ordering Rules. Ordering of characters from Latin, Greek, Cyrillic, Georgian and Armenian scripts is classified in these ICS categories:
  • 35.040.10 Coding of character sets
  • 01.140.20 Information sciences

This European Standard specifies the order between two character strings composed of characters from the Modern European Scripts (MES) collection of ISO/IEC 10646:2003 or subsets of it.

NOTE Collection 283 Modern European Scripts (MES) of ISO/IEC 10646:2003 was originally specified in CEN Workshop Agreement 13873:2000 Multilingual European Subsets of ISO/IEC 10646 as Multilingual European Subset Number 3 and was subsequently incorporated as a collection in Annex A of ISO/IEC 10646:2003 alongside its sister collections MES-1 and MES-2.

The ordering rules specified in this European Standard are only applicable for lists of data in more than one European language and when this data is intended for a multicultural audience. They complement existing national standards or practices in the field.