In North Korea, a separate character set called KPS 9566 is in use, which is rather similar to KS X 1001. These two encodings combine US-ASCII ( ISO 646) with the Korean standard KS X 1001:1992 (previously named KS C 5601:1987). ![]() Where 8 bits are allowed, the EUC-KR encoding is preferred. In RFC 1557, a method known as ISO-2022-KR for a 7-bit encoding of Korean characters in email was described. ![]() ![]() See also: ISO/IEC 2022, EUC-KR, KPS 9566, GB 12052, and List of modern Hangul characters in ISO/IEC 2022–compliant national character set standards
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