By Christopher J. Shaw
Communications of the ACM,
May 1964,
Vol. 7 No. 5, Pages 288-290
10.1145/364099.364236
Comments
The inability of existing programming languages to handle character strings from more than one or two alphabets is mentioned and a scheme for declaring additional alphabets is proposed. The scheme provides for: many-to-one encodings, right or left justification, collating sequences different from numeric sequence, variations in character size (number of bits) from alphabet to alphabet, and arbitrary source-language character representation.
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