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The code set includes all units defined in ISO 1000, ISO 2955-1983, [3] [a] ANSI X3.50-1986, [4] [b] HL7 and ENV 12435, and explicitly and verifiably addresses the naming conflicts and ambiguities in those standards to resolve them.
ISO/IEC 9075 "Information technology - Database languages - SQL" is an international standard for Structured Query Language, and is considered as specifying the minimum for what a database engine should fulfill in terms of SQL syntax, which is called Core SQL.
The standard was ratified on 26 June 1986 as ECMA-116 [1] and January 1987 as ANSI X3.113-1987. It was completely ignored; the microcomputer revolution had occurred while the specification was being argued over, and by the early-1980s Microsoft BASIC running on tens of millions of home computers had already come and gone.
The ancestral SCSI standard, X3.131-1986, generally referred to as SCSI-1, was published by the X3T9 technical committee of the American National Standards Institute (ANSI) in 1986. SCSI-2 was published in August 1990 as X3.T9.2/86-109, with further revisions in 1994 and subsequent adoption of a multitude of interfaces.
X3J13 is the name of a technical committee which was part of the International Committee for Information Technology Standards (INCITS, then named X3).The X3J13 committee was formed in 1986 to draw up an American National Standards Institute (ANSI) Common Lisp standard based on the first edition of the book Common Lisp the Language (also termed CLtL, or CLtL1), by Guy L. Steele Jr., which was ...
The original standard implementation of the C programming language was standardized as ANSI X3.159-1989, becoming the well-known ANSI C. The X3J13 committee was created in 1986 to formalize the ongoing consolidation of Common Lisp, [17] culminating in 1994 with the publication of ANSI's first object-oriented programming standard. [18]
SQLJ part 0: ANSI X3.135.10-1998, "Database Language SQL—Part 10: Object Language Bindings (SQL/OLB)" SQLJ part 1: ANSI NCITS 331.1-1999, "SQLJ—Part 1: SQL Routines Using the Java Programming Language"
The general format for an ANSI-compliant escape sequence is defined by ANSI X3.41 (equivalent to ECMA-35 or ISO/IEC 2022). [ 12 ] : 13.1 The escape sequences consist only of bytes in the range 0x20—0x7F (all the non-control ASCII characters), and can be parsed without looking ahead.