Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
This is a list of published [Note 1] International Organization for Standardization (ISO) standards and other deliverables. [Note 2] For a complete and up-to-date list of all the ISO standards, see the ISO catalogue. [1] The standards are protected by copyright and most of them must be purchased.
ISO 20022 is an ISO standard for electronic data interchange between financial institutions. It describes a metadata repository containing descriptions of messages and business processes , and a maintenance process for the repository content.
ISO 21549 Health informatics – Patient healthcard data ISO 21549-1:2013 Part 1: General structure; ISO 21549-2:2014 Part 2: Common objects; ISO 21549-3:2014 Part 3: Limited clinical data; ISO 21549-4:2014 Part 4: Extended clinical data; ISO 21549-5:2015 Part 5: Identification data; ISO 21549-6:2008 Part 6: Administrative data
|list, iso-code=L1, ..., L123 Number of "XYZ" code repetition per list, and over all tyhree lsits. There are 304 unique codes, repetitions make 450 different lines (code, List, entity, end-date can be repeated). Intended for checking and listformatting only (no new information). See § code-entity-list for demo
ISO 2455 Data processing — Vocabulary — [Draft merged into ISO 2382] ISO 2456:1986 Surface active agents — Water used as a solvent for tests — Specification and test methods; ISO 2457:1976 Solid wood parquet — Classification of beech strips; ISO 2458:1975 End-suction centrifugal pumps (rating 16 bar) — Test Code [Rejected draft]
Blood donation pictogram Blood donation center at the University Hospital of Basel, Switzerland. From left to right: Two cell separators for apheresis, secluded office for pre-donation blood pressure measurement and blood count, and on the right, chairs for whole blood donations. A patient donating blood at a Blood Bank in Córdoba, Argentina
SWIFT messages consist of five blocks of data including three headers, message content, and a trailer. Message types are crucial to identifying content. All SWIFT messages include the literal "MT" (message type/text [2]). This is followed by a three-digit number that denotes the message category, group and type. Consider the following two examples.
An 8-bit code may have GR codes specifying G1 characters, i.e. with its corresponding 7-bit code using Shift In and Shift Out to switch between the sets (e.g. JIS X 0201), [60] although some instead have GR codes specifying G2 characters, with the corresponding 7-bit code using a single-shift code to access the second set (e.g. T.51).