The two statements are correct. ISO has addressed the problem by adding more
ISO-8859-x standards, since changing 8859-1 would cause problems.  The best
thing to do is to use Unicode and avoid the codepage confusion :-)

Murray

> -----Original Message-----
> From: Leon Spencer [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: Tuesday, July 11, 2000 2:26 PM
> To:   Unicode List
> Subject:      Euro character in ISO
> 
> The Euro does not exist in iso-8859-1. It
> is in Cp1252 (WinLatin1) - Microsoft's code page
> superset of iso-8859-1. 
> 
> Is this correct? Has ISO addressed the Euro character?
> If so, it the issue more of vendors implementing it?
> 
> Leon

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