Front page uses windows-1252, shouldn't it be iso-8859-1?
I received this question:
I use Frontpage for my webpage design and FP automatically inserts the meta tag "<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=windows-1252">".
Should I have reference to ISO-8859-1 ?
I'm not a front page expert, and I can't answer all questions like this, however this is an common confusion. Windows-1252 is very similar to ISO-8859-1, but they aren't identical. Web sites and browsers have historically often treated these as equivilent, but they aren't, which is a great reason to use unicode for your encoding. (No, I don't know how to make front page use UTF-8, but that'd be the best solution). Looking on search.live.com (of course) for iso-8859-1 and windows-1252 will find some discussion of the differences. Wikipedia has some articles (they change so I won't quote them directly, but their encoding related articles are usually informative and often accurate.)
Comments
Anonymous
November 13, 2008
PingBack from http://www.tmao.info/front-page-uses-windows-1252-shouldnt-it-be-iso-8859-1/Anonymous
November 14, 2008
The comment has been removedAnonymous
January 28, 2009
Thanks Dennis :) FP users, please do that and make your pages UTF-8 :)Anonymous
September 08, 2010
BTW, if it looks strange that Windows-1252 was based on a draft of ISO 8859-1, here is a clue: Compare the dates when Windows 1.0 was released to when ISO 8859-1 was finalized.