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The Wayback Machine - https://web.archive.org/web/20170403121705/https://people.csail.mit.edu/jaffer/MIXF/
Abstract
Metric Interchange Formats describe character string encodings for
numerical values and units which:
- are unambiguous in all locales;
- use only Portable Character Set [PCS]
characters which are also Basic Latin characters in
Plane 0
of the Universal Character Set [UCS];
- are transparent to [UTF-7] and
[UTF-8] UCS transformation formats;
- are human readable and writable;
- are machine readable and writable;
- incorporate SI prefixes and units;
- incorporate [ISO 6093] numbers; and
- incorporate [IEC 60027-2] binary
prefixes.
Additionally, CMIXF incorporates
[ISO 4217] currency names.
According to [NASA 1999] Arthur Stephenson,
chairman of the Mars Climate Orbiter Mission Failure Investigation
Board:
"The 'root cause' of the loss of the spacecraft was the failed
translation of English units into metric units in a segment of
ground-based, navigation-related mission software, ..."
Although the [ISO 6093] standard for automated
interchange of numerical data is widely used, standardized measurement
units (other than for page formating) are not routinely attached to
interchange data.
The audience for metric standards extends beyond scientists and
engineers. In the preface to Guide for the Use of the
International System of Units (SI)
[NIST 811], B. Taylor writes:
The International System of Units, universally abbreviated SI, is
the modern metric system of measurement. Long the dominant
measurement system used in science, the SI is becoming the
dominant measurement system used in international commerce.
This, and the widespread use of metric prefixes with currency symbols
motivates the inclusion of [ISO 4217] currency
names.
In 2002, Jon Krom, Arnold Reinhold, and I devised an extension to
Metric Interchange Format (MIXF) to incorporate monetary
units based on [ISO 4217].
I was somewhat dissatisfied with it because, while currency exchange
rates change hourly, physical units are unchanging; also, there was
little use of metric prefixes with currencies on the web at that time.
Then in 2006 I noticed that the [CODATA]
Recommended Values of the Fundamental Physical Constants
had changed, requiring changes to two MIXF conversion
factors!
Recent web searches find that ISO currency names are frequently being
used with SI prefixes (eg. kUSD and MEUR). Its time to finish the
extension of MIXF to currencies: CMIXF.
I have created a mailing list for discussion of unit formats and
development of the CMIXF draft. Visit
Slib-units Info Page to join.
In 2002 the RFC editor decided that
metric-interchange-format-03
was not within the IETF's purview. Since then I have hosted
MIXF at
http://people.csail.mit.edu/jaffer/MIXF.
Is there some standards organization which CMIXF would be
suitable for?
Date: Mon, 8 Apr 2002 18:12:03 GMT
Subject: draft-jaffer-metric-interchange-format-03.txt
Cc: rfc-editor@rfc-editor.org, iesg@ietf.org
From: rfc-editor@rfc-editor.org
Aubrey,
We apologize for the delayed response. The RFC Editor has completed
the review of <draft-jaffer-metric-interchange-format-03.txt>. We
cannot publish this document as an RFC, as we are the wrong standards
body for this type of publication.
Thank you.
RFC Editor
- [ANSI X3.50]
-
ANSI, Representations for U.S. customary, SI, and other
units to be used in systems with limited character sets,
ANSI X3.50, 1986.
- [CODATA]
-
P. Mohr and B. Taylor, CODATA Recommended
Values of the Fundamental Physical Constants, National
Institute of standards and Technology, 2006.
- [CRC]
-
Chemical Rubber Company, CRC handbook of chemistry and physics,
CRC Press, 67th edition, 1986.
- [CSS2]
-
W3C, Cascading Style Sheets, level 2
CSS2 Specification
W3C Recommendation 1998
- [IEC 60027-2]
-
IEC,
Amendment 2 to IEC International Standard IEC 60027-2:
Letter symbols to be used in electrical technology - Part 2:
Telecommunications and electronics., January 1999.
- [ISO 2955]
-
ISO, Information processing-Representation of SI and other units
in systems with limited character sets, ISO 2955:1983.
- [ISO 4217]
-
ISO, Codes for the representation of currencies and
funds, ISO 4217:2001.
ISO 4217 Currency names and code elements
- [ISO 6093]
-
ISO, Representation of numerical values in character strings for
information interchanges, ISO 6093:1985.
- [NASA 1999]
-
NASA, Mars Climate Orbiter Failure Board Releases Report,
http://mars.jpl.nasa.gov/msp98/news/mco991110,
November 1999.
- [NIST 811]
-
Taylor, B., Guide for the Use of the International System of
Units (SI),
NIST Special Publication 811, 1995 Edition.
- [PCS]
-
Portable Character Set
The Open Group Base Specifications Issue 6
IEEE Std 1003.1, 2004 Edition
- [SI]
-
Bureau International des Poids et Mesures,
The International System of Units (SI),
8th edition, 2006.
- [UCS]
-
ISO, Universal Multiple-Octet Coded Character Set (UCS) - Part 1:
Architecture and Basic Multilingual Plane (BMP), ISO/IEC 10646-1,
March 2000.
- [UNICODE]
-
The Unicode Consortium, The Unicode Standard, Version 3.0
Addison-Wesley Pub Co, February, 2000.
- [UTF-7]
-
D. Goldsmith, UTF-7, A Mail-Safe Transformation Format of
Unicode,
RFC 2152,
May 1997.
- [UTF-8]
-
F. Yergeau, UTF-8, a transformation format of ISO
10646,
RFC 2279,
January 1998.
Copyright © 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011 Aubrey Jaffer
I am a guest and not a member of the MIT Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory.
My actions and comments do not reflect in any way on MIT.
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| Aubrey Jaffer
| agj @ alum.mit.edu
| Go Figure!
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