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Country codes are short alphabetic or numeric geography, geographical codes (geocodes) developed to represent countries and dependent areas, for use in data processing and communications. Several different systems have been developed to do this. The term ''country code'' frequently refers to ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 or international dialing codes, the E.164 list of country calling codes, country calling codes.


ISO 3166-1

This standard defines for most of the countries and dependent areas in the world: *a two-letter (ISO 3166-1 alpha-2) *a three-letter (ISO 3166-1 alpha-3), and *a three-digit numeric (ISO 3166-1 numeric) code. The two-letter codes are used as the basis for some other codes or applications, for example, *for ISO 4217 currency codes and *with deviations, for country code top-level domain names (ccTLDs) on the Internet: list of Internet TLDs. For more applications see ISO 3166-1 alpha-2.


Other country codes

*European Union: **Before the Enlargement of the European Union, 2004 EU enlargement the EU used the UN Road Traffic Conventions List of international license plate codes, license plate codes. Since then, it has used the ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 code, but with two modification

***EL for Greece (instead of GR) ***(formerly) UK for United Kingdom (instead of GB) **The ''Nomenclature des unités territoriales statistiques'' (Nomenclature of territorial units for statistics, NUTS) of the European Union, mostly focusing on subdivisions of the EU member states *FIFA (Fédération Internationale de Football Association) assigns a three-letter code (dubbed FIFA Trigramme) to each of its member and non-member countries: List of FIFA country codes *Federal Information Processing Standard (FIPS) FIPS 10-4, 10-4 defined two-letter codes used by the U.S. government and in the CIA World Factbook: list of FIPS country codes. On September 2, 2008, FIPS 10-4 was one of ten standards withdrawn by NIST as a Federal Information Processing Standard. * The Bureau of Transportation Statistics, part of the United States Department of Transportation (US DOT), maintains its own list of codes, so-called World Area Codes, World Area Codes (WAC), for state and country codes. * GOST 7.67: country codes in Cyrillic from the GOST standards committee *From the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO): **Aircraft Registration#List of countries/regions and their registration prefixes and patterns, The national prefixes used in aircraft registration numbers **International Civil Aviation Organization#Registered codes, Location prefixes in four-character ICAO airport codes *International Olympic Committee (IOC) three-letter codes used in sporting events: list of IOC country codes *From the International Telecommunication Union (ITU): **the E.164 international telephone dialing codes: list of country calling codes with 1-3 digits, **the International mobile subscriber identity, E.212 mobile country codes (MCC), for mobile/wireless phone addresses, **the first few characters of call signs of radio stations (maritime, aeronautical, amateur radio, broadcasting, and so on) define the country: the ITU prefix, **ITU letter codes for member-countries, **ITU prefix - amateur and experimental stations - The International Telecommunication Union (ITU) assigns national telecommunication prefixes for amateur radio, amateur and experimental radio use, so that operators can be identified by their country of origin. These prefixes are legally administered by the national entity to which prefix ranges are assigned. **Three-digit codes used to identify countries in maritime mobile radio transmissions, known as maritime identification digits *License plates for automobiles: **Under the 1949 and 1968 United Nations Road Traffic Conventions (distinguishing signs of vehicles in international traffic): List of international license plate codes. **Diplomatic license plates in the United States, assigned by the United States Department of State, U.S. State Department. *North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) used two-letter codes of its own: list of NATO country codes. They were largely borrowed from the FIPS 10-4 codes mentioned below. In 2003 the eighth edition of the Standardisation Agreement (STANAG) adopted the ISO 3166 three-letter codes with one exception (the code for Macedonia). With the ninth edition, NATO is transitioning to four- and six-letter codes based on ISO 3166 with a few exceptions and additions *United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) also has its own list of List of UNDP country codes, trigram country codes * World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO): WIPO ST.3 gives two-letter codes to countries and regional intellectual property organizations *World Meteorological Organization (WMO) has its own list of country codes, used in reporting meteorological observations * UIC (the International Union of Railways): UIC Country Codes The developers of ISO 3166 intended that in time it would replace other coding systems in existence.


Other codings

The following can represent countries: *The initial digits of International Standard Book Numbers (ISBN) are group identifiers for countries, areas, or language regions. *The first three digits of GS1 Company Prefixes used to identify products, for example, in barcodes, designate (national) numbering agencies.


Lists of country codes by country

Country codes: A, A - Country codes: B, B - Country codes: C, C - Country codes: D–E, D–E - Country codes: F, F - Country codes: G, G - Country codes: H–I, H–I - Country codes: J–K, J–K - Country codes: L, L - Country codes: M, M - Country codes: N, N - Country codes: O–Q, O–Q - Country codes: R, R - Country codes: S, S - Country codes: T, T - Country codes: U–Z, U–Z


See also

*List of ISO 3166 country codes *ISO 639 language codes *Language code *Numbering scheme *Top-level domain


References


External links


Comparison of various systems
*Another comparison: *A comparison wit
ISO, IFS and others
wit
notes
{{DEFAULTSORT:Country Code Country codes, * Geocodes