From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Office Open XML (also referred to as
OOXML or Open XML) is an ISO/IEC
standardized ZIP-compatible file format originally developed by Microsoft[2] for
representing spreadsheets, charts, presentations and word processing
documents.
Starting with Microsoft Office 2007, the Office
Open XML file formats (ECMA-376) have become the default[3]
file format of Microsoft Office.[4][5
]
Background
In 2000, Microsoft released an initial version of an XML-based format for Microsoft Excel,
which was incorporated in Office XP. In 2002, a new file format for
Microsoft Word followed.[6]
The Excel and Word formats – known as the Microsoft Office XML
formats – were later incorporated into the 2003 release of
Microsoft Office.
Microsoft announced in November 2005 that it would co-sponsor
standardization of the new version of their XML-based formats
through Ecma International, as "Office Open
XML".[7]
Standardization process
Microsoft submitted initial material to Ecma
International Technical Committee TC45, where it was
standardized to become ECMA-376, approved in December 2006.[8]
This standard was then fast-tracked in the Joint Technical Committee 1
of ISO and IEC.
After initially failing
to pass, an amended version of the format received the
necessary votes for approval as an ISO/IEC Standard as the result
of a JTC 1 fast
tracking standardization process that concluded in April 2008.[9]
The resulting four part International Standard (designated ISO/IEC
29500:2008) was published in November 2008[10] and
can be downloaded from the ITTF.[11] A
technically equivalent set of texts is published by Ecma as
ECMA-376 Office Open XML File Formats - 2nd edition
(December 2008); they can be downloaded from their web site.[12]
The ISO standardization of Office Open XML was controversial and
embittered, with IBM threatening to
leave standards bodies that it said allow dominant corporations
like Microsoft to wield undue influence. Microsoft was accused of
co-opting the standardization process by leaning on countries to
ensure that it got enough votes at the ISO for Office Open XML to
pass.[13]
Licensing
Under the Ecma International code of conduct in patent
matters,[14]
participating and approving member organisations of ECMA are
required to make available their patent rights on a Reasonable and
Non Discriminatory (RAND) basis.
Microsoft, the main contributor to the standard, provided a
Covenant Not to Sue[15] for
its patent licensing. The covenant received a mixed reception, with
some (like the Groklaw blog) criticising it[16] and
others (such as Lawrence Rosen, an attorney and lecturer
at Stanford Law School) endorsing
it.[17]
Microsoft has added the format to their Open
Specification Promise[18]
in which
"Microsoft irrevocably promises not to assert any Microsoft
Necessary Claims against you for making, using, selling, offering
for sale, importing or distributing any implementation to the
extent it conforms to a Covered Specification [...]"
This is limited to applications which do not deviate from the
ISO/IEC 29500:2008 or Ecma-376 standard and to parties that do not
"file, maintain or voluntarily participate in a patent infringement
lawsuit against a Microsoft implementation of such Covered
Specification".[19][20] The
Open Specification Promise was included in documents submitted to
ISO/IEC in support of the ECMA-376 fast track submission.[21]
Ecma International asserted that, "The OSP enables both open source
and commercial software to implement [the specification]".[22]
Richard
Stallman of the Free Software Foundation has
stated that "Microsoft offers a gratis patent license for OOXML on
terms which do not allow free implementations".[23]
Versions
The Office Open XML specification exists in a number of
versions.
ECMA-376 1st edition
(2006)
The ECMA standard is structured in five parts to meet the needs
of different audiences.[12]
- Part 1. Fundamentals
- Vocabulary, notational conventions and abbreviations
- Summary of primary and supporting markup languages
- Conformance conditions and interoperability guidelines
- Constraints within the Open Packaging Conventions that apply to
each document type
- Part 2. Open Packaging Conventions
- The Open Packaging Conventions
(OPC), for the package model and physical package, is defined and
used by various document types in various applications from
multiple vendors.
- It defines core properties, thumbnails, digital signatures, and
authorizations and encryption capabilities for parts or all the
contents in the package.
- XML schemas for the OPC are declared as XML Schema Definitions
(XSD) and (non-normatively) using RELAX NG (ISO/IEC 19757-2)
- Part 3. Primer
- Informative (non-normative) introduction to WordprocessingML,
SpreadsheetML, PresentationML, DrawingML, VML and Shared MLs,
providing context and illustrating elements through examples and
diagrams
- Describes the custom XML data storing facility within a package
to support integration with business data
- Part 4. Markup Language Reference
- Contains the reference material for WordprocessingML,
SpreadsheetML, PresentationML, DrawingML, Shared MLs and Custom XML
Schema, defining every element and attribute including the element
hierarchy (parent/child relationships)
- XML schemas for the markup languages are declared as XSD and
(non-normatively) using RELAX NG
- Defines the custom XML data storing facility
- Part 5. Markup Compatibility and Extensibility
- Describes extension facilities of OpenXML documents and
specifies elements and attributes by which applications with
different extensions can interoperate
ISO/IEC
29500:2008
The ISO/IEC standard is structured into four parts.[24]
Parts 1, 2 and 3 are independent standards; for example Part 2,
specifying Open Packaging Conventions,
is used by other files formats including XPS and Design Web Format. Part 4 is to be
read as a modification to Part 1, on which it depends.
A technically equivalent set of texts is also published by Ecma
as ECMA-376 2nd edition (2008).
- Part 1 (Fundamentals and Markup Language Reference)
- This part has 5560 pages. It contains:
- Conformance definitions
- Reference material for the XML document markup languages
defined by the Standard
- XML schemas for the document markup languages declared using XSD and
(non-normatively) RELAX
NG
- Defines the foreign markup facilities
- Part 2 (Open Packaging Conventions)
- This part has 129 pages. It contains:
- A description of the Open Packaging Conventions (package model,
physical package)
- Core properties, thumbnails and digital signatures
- XML schemas for the OPC are declared using XSD and
(non-normatively) RELAX
NG)
- Part 3 (Markup Compatibility and Extensibility)
- This part has 40 pages. It contains:
- A description of extensions: elements and attributes which
define mechanisms allowing applications to specify alternative
means of negotiating content
- Extensibility rules are expressed using NVDL
- Part 4 (Transitional Migration Features)
- This part has 1464 pages. It contains:
- Legacy material such as compatibility settings and the graphics
markup language VML
- A list of syntactic differences between this text and ECMA-376
1st edition
The standard specifies two levels of document and application
conformance, strict and
transitional for each of WordprocessingML,
PresentationML and SpreadsheetML. The standard also specifies
applications descriptions of base and
full.
Compatibility between
versions
The intent of the changes from ECMA-376 1st edition to ISO/IEC
29500:2008 was that a valid ECMA-376 document would be a valid ISO
29500 "transitional" document[25], but
one change introduced at the BRM (refusing to allow further values
for xsd:boolean) had the effect of breaking backwards compatibility
for most documents.[26] A fix
for this has been suggested to ISO/IEC JTC1/SC34/WG4, and was approved in
June 2009 to go forward as a recommendation for the first amendment
to Office Open XML.[27]
File
formats
The Office Open XML file formats are a set of file formats that can
be used to represent electronic office documents. The format defines a set
of XML markup vocabularies for word processing documents, spreadsheets and presentations as well
as specific XML markup vocabularies for material such as
mathematical formulae, graphics, bibliographies etc. The stated
goal of the Office Open XML standard is to be capable of faithfully
representing the pre-existing corpus of word-processing documents,
spreadsheets and presentations that had been produced by the
Microsoft Office applications and to facilitate extensibility and
interoperability by enabling implementations by multiple vendors
and on multiple platforms.
An Office Open XML file is a ZIP-compatible OPC package containing XML documents and other resources. That
is, one can see the insides of a .xlsm file, for example, by
renaming it as .zip file. Then, the file could be opened by
third-party tools like WinZip and the actual .xml files contained
therein can be viewed in Web browsers.
Adoption
Several countries have formally announced either adoption, or
the evaluation of adoption of Office Open XML. What this means
varies from case to case; in some cases, it means that the Office
Open XML standard has a national standard identifier; in some
cases, it means that the Office Open XML standard is permitted to
be used where national regulation says that non-proprietary formats
must be used, and in still other cases, it means that some
government body has actually decided that Office Open XML will be
used in some specific context.
- Belgium
- Belgium's Federal Public
Service for Information and Communication Technology in 2006 was
evaluating the adoption of the Office Open XML format. It already
then confirmed that it would consider all ISO standards to be open
standards, mentioning Office Open XML as such a possible future ISO
standard.[28]
- Denmark
- In June 2007, the Danish
Ministry
of Science, Technology and Innovation recommended that
beginning with January 1, 2008 public authorities must support at
least one of the two word processing document formats Office Open
XML or Open Document
Format in all new IT solutions, where appropriate.[29]
- Germany
- In Germany the Office
Open XML standard is currently under observation by the
governmental office for standards in public IT ("Koordinierungs-
und Beratungsstelle der Bundesregierung für Informationstechnik in
der Bundesverwaltung" (KBSt). The latest release of "SAGA"
(Standards and Architectures for E-Government-Applications)
includes Office Open XML file formats. The standard may be used to
exchange complex documents when further processing is required.[30]
- Japan
- On June 29, 2007, the government of Japan published a new interoperability framework
which gives preference to the procurement of products that follow
open standards.[31][32] On
July 2 the government declared that they hold the view that formats
like Office Open XML which organizations such as Ecma
International and ISO had also approved was, according to them,
an open standard. Also, they said that it was one of the
preferences, whether the format is open, to choose which software
the government shall deploy.
- Lithuania
- Lithuanian Standards Board has adopted the ISO/IEC 29500:2008
Office Open XML format standard as Lithuanian National standard. The decision
was made by Technical Committee 4 Information Technology on March
5, 2009. The proposal to adopt the Office Open XML format standard
was submitted by Lithuanian Archives Department under the Government of the
Republic of Lithuania.[33]
- Norway
- Norway's Ministry of Government Administration and
Reform is evaluating the adoption of the Office Open XML
format. The ministry put the document standard under observation in
December 2007.[34]
- Sweden
- The Kingdom of Sweden has
adopted Office Open XML as a 4 part Swedish National Standard
SS-ISO/IEC 29500:2009.[35][36][37][38]
- Switzerland
- In July 2007, the Swiss Federal Council announced
adherence SAGA.ch e-Government standards mandatory for its
departments as well as for cantons, cities and municipalities. The
latest version of SAGA.ch includes Office Open XML file
formats.[39]
- United Kingdom
- The UK has put out an action plan for use of open standards,
which includes ISO/IEC 29500 as one of several formats to be
supported.[40][41]
- United States of America
- On April 15, 2009, the ANSI-accredited INCITS organisation voted to
adopt ISO/IEC 29500:2008 as an American National Standard.[42]
- The state of Massachusetts has
been examining its options for implementing XML-based document processing. In early 2005, Eric Kriss, Secretary of
Administration and Finance in Massachusetts, was the first government official in
the United
States to publicly connect open formats to a public policy
purpose: "It is an overriding imperative of the American democratic system that we cannot have our
public documents locked up in some kind of proprietary format,
perhaps unreadable in the future, or subject to a proprietary
system license that restricts access".[43] Since
2007 Massachusetts has classified Office Open XML as "Open Format"
and has amended its approved
technical standards list — the Enterprise Technical Reference
Model (ETRM) — to include Office Open XML. Massachusetts,
under heavy pressure from some vendors, now formally endorses
Office Open XML formats for its public records.[44]
Application
support
Microsoft, which currently has no products which are compatible
with ISO/IEC 29500,[46][47][48]
has voiced commitment to using the ISO/IEC 29500 standard in their
future products.[49]
Starting with Microsoft Office 2007, the Office
Open XML file formats (ECMA-376) have become the default[3]
file format of Microsoft Office.[4][5
] However, due to the changes introduced in a
later version, Office 2007 is not entirely in compliance with
ISO/IEC 29500:2008.[46][47][48]
Microsoft has stated that the planned Microsoft Office 2010 will be the
first version to implement the ISO/IEC 29500:2008 compliant version
of Office Open XML.[46]
The OpenOffice.org office suite has been
able to import Office Open XML files (.docx, .xlsx, .pptx, etc.)
since version 3.[50]
Other mainstream Office products that have started to offer
import support for the Office Open XML formats are Apple's TextEdit (included with Mac OS X) and iWork, IBM Lotus Notes, Corel Wordperfect and Google apps.
See also
References
- ^ a
b
c
Microsoft. "Register file extensions on
third party servers". microsoft.com. http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc179224.aspx. Retrieved
2009-09-04.
- ^
"Q&A: Microsoft
Co-Sponsors Submission of Office Open XML Document Formats to Ecma
International for Standardization". Microsoft. 2005-11-21. https://www.microsoft.com/presspass/features/2005/nov05/11-21Ecma.mspx.
- ^ a
b
"Microsoft Expands List of
Formats Supported in Microsoft Office". Microsoft. http://www.microsoft.com/Presspass/press/2008/may08/05-21ExpandedFormatsPR.mspx?rss_fdn=Press%20Releases. Retrieved
2008-05-21.
- ^ a
b
"Microsoft's future lies
somewhere beyond the Vista by Evansville Courier & Press".
Courierpress.com. http://www.courierpress.com/news/2008/oct/24/microsofts-future-lies-somewhere-beyond-the/. Retrieved
2009-05-19.
- ^ a
b
"Rivals Set Their Sights on
Microsoft Office: Can They Topple the Giant? -
Knowledge@Wharton". Knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu. http://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/article.cfm?articleid=1795. Retrieved
2009-05-19.
- ^ Brian Jones (2007-01-25). "History of office XML
formats (1998–2006)". MSDN blogs. http://blogs.msdn.com/brian_jones/archive/2007/01/25/office-xml-formats-1998-2006.aspx.
- ^
"Microsoft Co-Sponsors
Submission of Office Open XML Document Formats to Ecma
International for Standardization". Microsoft. 2005-11-21. http://www.microsoft.com/presspass/features/2005/nov05/11-21Ecma.mspx.
- ^
"Ecma International approves
Office Open XML standard". Ecma International. 2006-12-07. http://www.ecma-international.org/news/PressReleases/PR_TC45_Dec2006.htm.
- ^ "ISO/IEC DIS 29500 receives
necessary votes for approval as an International Standard".
ISO. 2008-04-02. http://www.iso.org/iso/pressrelease.htm?refid=Ref1123.
- ^
ISO/IEC (2008-11-18). "Publication of ISO/IEC
29500:2008, Information technology — Office Open XML
formats". ISO. http://www.iso.org/iso/pressrelease.htm?refid=Ref1181. Retrieved
2008-11-19.
- ^
"Freely Available
Standards". ITTF (ISO/IEC). 2008-11-18.
http://standards.iso.org/ittf/PubliclyAvailableStandards/index.html.
- ^ a
b
"Standard ECMA-376".
Ecma-international.org. http://www.ecma-international.org/publications/standards/Ecma-376.htm. Retrieved
2009-05-19.
- ^
"ISO publishes Office Open
XML specification". InfoWorld. 19 November 2008. http://www.infoworld.com/t/applications/iso-publishes-office-open-xml-specification-918.
- ^
"Code of Conduct in Patent
Matters". Ecma International. http://www.ecma-international.org/memento/codeofconduct.htm.
- ^
"Microsoft Covenant Regarding
Office 2003 XML Reference Schemas". Microsoft. http://www.microsoft.com/office/xml/covenant.mspx. Retrieved
2006-07-11.
- ^
"2 Escape Hatches in MS's
Covenant Not to Sue". Groklaw. http://www.groklaw.net/articlebasic.php?story=20051202135844482. Retrieved
2007-01-29.
- ^
Berlind, David (November 28, 2005). "Top open source lawyer blesses new terms on
Microsoft's XML file format". ZDNet. http://blogs.zdnet.com/BTL/?p=2192. Retrieved
2007-01-27.
- ^ "Microsoft Open Specification
Promise". Microsoft. 2006-09-12. http://www.microsoft.com/interop/osp/default.mspx. Retrieved
2007-04-22.
- ^
"http://www.ecma-international.org/publications/index.html".
Ecma International. http://www.ecma-international.org/publications/index.html.
""Ecma Standards and Technical Reports are made available to all
interested persons or organizations, free of charge and licensing
restrictions""
- ^
"Microsoft Open Specification
Promise". Microsoft.com. http://www.microsoft.com/Interop/osp/default.mspx.
- ^ "Licensing conditions that
Microsoft offers for Office Open XML". Jtc1sc34.org.
2006-12-20. http://www.jtc1sc34.org/repository/0810c.htm. Retrieved
2009-05-19.
- ^ "Microsoft Word —
Responses to Comments and Perceived Contradictions.doc"
(PDF). http://www.ecma-international.org/news/TC45_current_work/Ecma%20responses.pdf. Retrieved
2009-09-16.
- ^
Richard Stallman (2009-05-17). "We Can Put an End to Word
Attachments". http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/no-word-attachments.html. Retrieved
2009-10-12.
- ^ "ISO (You searched for
"29500" in title and abstract". International
Organization for Standardization. 2009-06-05. http://www.iso.org/iso/search.htm?qt=29500&published=on&active_tab=standards.
- ^
"Re-introducing on/off-values
to ST-OnOff in OOXML Part 4". http://idippedut.dk/post/2009/06/23/Re-introducing-onoff-values-to-ST-OnOff-in-OOXML-Part-4.aspx. Retrieved
2009-09-29.
- ^
"OOXML and Office 2007
Conformance: a Smoke Test". http://www.griffinbrown.co.uk/blog/2008/04/17/OOXMLAndOffice2007ConformanceASmokeTest.aspx. Retrieved
2009-09-29.
- ^
"Minutes of the Copenhagen
Meeting of ISO/IEC JTC1/SC34/WG4". 2009-06-22. http://www.itscj.ipsj.or.jp/sc34/open/1239.pdf. Retrieved
2009-09-29.
page 15
- ^
"FED13321-docsPeterStrickx.indd" (PDF). http://www.fedict.belgium.be/nl/binaries/Open_Standaarden_NL_V1_tcm167-16667.pdf. Retrieved
2009-09-16.
- ^
"Bilag 8 – Sammenligning
af rapporten om "Estimering af omkostningerne ved indførelse af
Office Open XML (OOXML) og Open Document Format (ODF) i
centraladministrationen" i forhold til de spørgsmål, der skal
belyses i de økonomiske konsekvensvurderinger, jf. rapporten om
"Anvendelse af åbne standarder i det offentlige"". Vtu.dk. http://vtu.dk/nyheder/aktuelle-temaer/2007/aabne-standarder/bilag/bilag-8.html/. Retrieved
2009-05-19.
- ^
"SAGA 4.0" (PDF). http://gsb.download.bva.bund.de/KBSt/SAGA/SAGA_v4.0.pdf. Retrieved
2009-09-16.
- ^
Gardner, David (2007-07-10). "Office Software Formats
Battle Moves To Asia". Information Week. http://www.informationweek.com/news/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=201000546. Retrieved
2007-07-27.
- ^
"Interoperability framework
for information systems (in Japanese)". Ministry of Economy,
Trade and Industry, Japan. 2007-06-29. http://www.meti.go.jp/press/20070629014/20070629014.html. Retrieved
2007-07-27.
- ^
"Latest News". Open XML
Community. http://www.openxmlcommunity.com/latestnews.aspx. Retrieved
2009-05-19.
- ^
"Referansekatalog for
IT-standarder i offentlig sektor". regjeringen.no. http://www.regjeringen.no/en/dep/fad/Documents/Rundskriv/2007/Referansekatalog-for-IT-standarder-i-off.html?id=494951. Retrieved
2009-05-19.
- ^
"SS-ISO/IEC
29500-1:2009". Sis.se. 2009-01-19. http://www.sis.se/DesktopDefault.aspx?tabName=@DocType_1&Doc_ID=68693&PresID=2&Desc=SS-ISO/IEC%2029500-1:2009. Retrieved
2009-09-16.
- ^
"SS-ISO/IEC
29500-2:2009". Sis.se. http://www.sis.se/DesktopDefault.aspx?tabName=@DocType_1&Doc_ID=68694&PresID=1&Desc=SS-ISO/IEC%2029500-2:2009. Retrieved
2009-09-16.
- ^
"SS-ISO/IEC
29500-3:2009". Sis.se. http://www.sis.se/DesktopDefault.aspx?tabName=@DocType_1&Doc_ID=68695&PresID=2&Desc=SS-ISO/IEC%2029500-3:2009. Retrieved
2009-09-16.
- ^
"SS-ISO/IEC
29500-4:2009". Sis.se. http://www.sis.se/DesktopDefault.aspx?tabName=@DocType_1&Doc_ID=68696&PresID=1&Desc=SS-ISO/IEC%2029500-4:2009. Retrieved
2009-09-16.
- ^
"eCH — Downloads |
Standards/Normes | eCH-0014 d SAGA.ch". Ech.ch. http://www.ech.ch/index.php?option=com_docman&task=cat_view&gid=92&lang=en. Retrieved
2009-05-19.
- ^
"Open Source, Open Standards
and Re–Use: Government Action Plan". UK Government Cabinet
Office. 2009-02-24. http://www.cabinetoffice.gov.uk/government_it/open_source/action.aspx.
- ^
Rick Jelliffe (2009-02-26). "Open standards: the UK gets
it, probably". http://broadcast.oreilly.com/2009/02/open-standards-the-uk-gets-it.html.
- ^
"INCITS Letter Ballot
3025". INCITS. 2009-04-15. http://ballot.itic.org/itic/archive.taf?function=detail&ballot_id=3025&_UserReference=9B6726AA59D4BAC249E6E82E.
- ^
"Informal comments on Open
Formats". Web.archive.org. http://web.archive.org/web/20061013201242/http://www.mass.gov/eoaf/open_formats_comments.html. Retrieved
2009-09-16.
- ^
"Cover Pages: Major Revision
of Massachusetts Enterprise Technical Reference Model (ETRM)".
Xml.coverpages.org. http://xml.coverpages.org/ni2007-07-03-a.html. Retrieved
2009-05-19.
- ^ a
b
c
"Microsoft Expands List of
Formats Supported in Microsoft Office". Microsoft.com.
2008-05-21. http://www.microsoft.com/Presspass/press/2008/may08/05-21ExpandedFormatsPR.mspx. Retrieved
2009-05-19.
- ^ a
b
Lai, Eric (2008-05-27). = 141&pageNumber=1 "FAQ:
Office 14 and Microsoft's support for ODF".
Computerworld.com. http://www.computerworld.com/action/article.do?command=viewArticleBasic&taxonomyName=Protocols+and+Standards&articleId=9089258&taxonomyId
= 141&pageNumber=1.
Retrieved 2009-05-19.
- ^ a
b
Andy Updegrove. "Microsoft Office 2007 to
Support ODF — and not OOXML". ConsortiumInfo.org. http://consortiuminfo.org/standardsblog/article.php?story=20080521092930864. Retrieved
2009-05-19.
- ^
"An Open Letter from Chris
Capossela, Senior Vice President, Microsoft Office". http://www.microsoft.com/interop/letters/ChrisCapOpenLetter.mspx. Retrieved 2008-05-26. "...
we are committed to supporting the Open XML specification that is
approved by ISO/IEC in our products. ... We are committed to the
healthy maintenance of the standard once ratification takes place
so that it will continue to be useful and relevant to the rapidly
growing number of implementers and users around the
world."
- ^
"OpenOffice.org 3.0 New
Features". 2008-10-13. http://www.openoffice.org/dev_docs/features/3.0/#Microsoft_Office_2007_Import_Filters. Retrieved
2009-10-24.
External
links
- ECMA-376 site
- ISO/IEC 29500:2008
- OpenXMLDeveloper.org,
Microsoft's site for developers
- Open XML Community site
Microsoft's site for customers and partners
- "The WordprocessingML
Vocabulary", sample chapter from O'Reilly book Office 2003
XMLPDF (1.22 MB)
- OpenOffice.org, How do I
open Microsoft Office 2007 files? Article by OpenOffice.org
- Information technology --
Office Open XML file formats, ISO Standards, JTC 1
Information technology, SC 34
- FAQs on ISO/IEC 29500,
ISO's FAQ site on ISO/IEC 29500
- DOCX reference document,
contains a file with fairly complex formatting and can be used to
quickly check compatibility of an implementation
- OpenXML site, contains resources, articles and
tools for Office Open XML
- Interoperability study
showing an indication of the percentage of support for Office Open
XML by several different office suite implementations in
aug-2008
| ISO
Standards |
|
Lists: List of ISO standards · List of ISO
romanizations · List of
IEC standards
Categories: Category:ISO standards · Category:OSI protocols |
|
| 1-9k |
1 ·
2 · 3 · 4 ·
9 · 31 ( -0,
-1, -2, -3, -4, -5, -6, -7, -8, -9, -10, -11, -12, -13) · 128 · 216 · 217 · 226 · 228 · 233 · 259 · 269 · 302 · 306 · 428 · 639 · 639-1 · 639-2 · 639-3 · 639-5 · 639-6 · 646 · 690 · 732 · 746 · 843 · 1000 · 1007 · 1073-1 · 1413 · 1745 · 2014 · 2015 · 2022 · 2108 · 2145 · 2281 · 2709 · 2711 · 2788 · 3029 · 3103 · 3166 · 3166-1 · 3166-2 · 3166-3 · 3307 · 3602 · 3864 · 3901 · 3977 · 4031 · 4157 · 4217 · 5218 · 5775 · 5776 · 5964 · 6166 · 6344 · 6346 · 6425 · 6429 · 6438 · 6523 · 6709 · 7001 · 7002 · 7098 · 7185 · 7498 · 7736 · 7810 · 7811 · 7812 · 7813 · 7816 · 8000 · 8217 · 8571 · 8583 · 8601 · 8632 · 8652 · 8807 · 8820-5 · 8859 ( -1, -2, -3, -4, -5, -6, -7, -8, -9, -10, -11, -12, -13, -14, -15, -16) · 9000 · 9075 ·
9126 · 9241 · 9362 · 9407 · 9506 · 9529 · 9594 · 9660 · 9897 · 9945 · 9984 · 9985 · 9995
|
|
| 10k- |
|
|
| See
also: All articles beginning with
"ISO" |
|