Bản_mẫu:Infobox_character_encoding

Infobox template for character encodings, character sets, code pages et cetera.While the difference between a coded character set and a character encoding is clear in a Unicode context (UTF-8 and UTF-16 are different encodings for the same set), the difference is often blurred immensely by legacy encodings. For example, so-called "WinLatin-1" is a de facto extension of the "Latin-1" (ISO 8859-1) encoding, whereas so-called "DOS Latin-1" is an alternative, incompatible encoding (or transformation format) of the ISO 8859-1 charset. Both add their own extensions, meaning that their own charsets, taken as wholes, have their own unique identities as well. For this reason, the same infobox template is used for both.See below for documentation of individual parameters. It is usually neither appropriate nor necessary to specify all of them.Dữ liệu bản mẫu cho Infobox character encodingAn infobox for a format comprising a coded character set and/or a character encoding.Tham số bản mẫuNên dùng bản mẫu này với các tham số đặt thành khối.Common, preferably unique, name of character encoding (displayed as title of infobox). Not necessarily a valid label.Image (such as a single byte character grid, multiple byte layout chart or a logo of the set)Caption for the imageA label of the encoding to be used in MIME types. Should be an IANA-approved label for the specific encoding in question; favour the Preferred MIME Name if one is available. Set |_nomimecode= to disable the default <code>...</code> formatting.A label of the encoding used in Kermit. As MIME names are currently accepted by Kermit, this is not necessarily useful to note, but may be if the label is in extensive use or if there is no MIME name for the encoding. Set |_nokermitcode= to disable the default <code>...</code> formatting.Other names and labels of the character encodingThe language or languages which the character encoding is used for or, more broadly, supports.Individual or organisation who created the encodingIf the format is part of a standard or standards, list it/them here.Defining documents or reference implementations which don't constitute a standard.Usage status of the character encodingClassification of the charset or encoding, e.g. series it may be part of (e.g. ISO 8859), general categories (e.g. Extended ASCII), higher level encoding it might be built for (ISO 2022), et cetera.Encodings which it is an extended version or superset of (but which it may or may not be a clear successor of).Encodings which it is a modification of but NOT (either in theory or practice) a superset of.Noteworthy extended versions of the charset or encoding (but which may or may not be regarded as clear successors).Repertoire or charset which is a subset (or equal set) of this encoding's repertoire. Whilst this may be something which is both a charset and an encoding, it should not be an encoding solely encoding a charset with its own clear identity (e.g. 'ISO 8859-1', 'Unicode' are both appropriate values but 'UTF-8' is not). If it is an encoding which is a subset of the encoding itself, it goes in the Extends field.Encoding or transformation formats for the charset. These are usually listed if the charset either doesn't define an encoding format itself, or defines more than one (e.g. Unicode), or one which is not consistently used.Encoding/charset/format which it superseded in some context.Encoding/charset/format which it was superseded by in some context.Any other encodings which are worth of note as being related, but neither a predecessor, nor a successor, nor a subset.Something to leave at the bottom of the infobox, below the information. For example, a {{notelist}} invocation.