Английская Википедия:Deutsches Institut für Normung
Шаблон:Redirect Шаблон:Short description
Шаблон:Lang (DIN; in English, the German Institute for Standardisation) is the German national organization for standardization and is the German ISO member body. DIN is a German Registered Association (e.V.) headquartered in Berlin. There are currently around thirty thousand DIN Standards, covering nearly every field of technology.
History
Founded in 1917 as the Шаблон:Lang (NADI, "Standardisation Committee of German Industry"), the NADI was renamed Шаблон:Lang (DNA, "German Standardisation Committee") in 1926 to reflect that the organization now dealt with standardization issues in many fields; viz., not just for industrial products. In 1975 it was renamed again to Шаблон:Lang, or 'DIN' and is recognised by the German government as the official national-standards body, representing German interests at the international and European levels.
The acronym, 'DIN' is often incorrectly expanded as Шаблон:Lang ("German Industry Standard"). This is largely due to the historic origin of the DIN as "NADI". The NADI indeed published their standards as Шаблон:Lang (Шаблон:Lang). For example, the first published standard was 'Шаблон:Lang' (about tapered pins) in 1918. Many people still mistakenly associate DIN with the old Шаблон:Lang naming convention.
One of the earliest, and probably the best known, is DIN 476 — the standard that introduced the A-series paper sizes in 1922 — adopted in 1975 as International Standard ISO 216. Common examples in modern technology include DIN and mini-DIN connectors for electronics, and the DIN rail.
DIN SPEC 3105, published in 2020, is "the first German standard to be published under an open license (CC-BY-SA 4.0) [...] to implement an open standardisation process".[1]
DIN standard designation
The designation of a DIN standard shows its origin (# denotes a number):
- DIN # is used for German standards with primarily domestic significance or designed as a first step toward international status. E DIN # is a draft standard and DIN V # is a preliminary standard.
- DIN EN # is used for the German edition of European standards.
- DIN ISO # is used for the German edition of ISO standards.
- DIN EN ISO # is used if the standard has also been adopted as a European standard.
Examples of DIN standards
- DIN 476: international paper sizes (now ISO 216 or DIN EN ISO 216)
- DIN 1451: typeface used by German railways and on traffic signs
- DIN 31635: transliteration of the Arabic language
- DIN 41612: mechanical standard for backplane electrical connection
- DIN 72552: electric terminal numbers in automobiles
See also
- Austrian Standards International
- Swiss Association for Standardization
- Die Brücke, an earlier German institute aiming to set standard paper sizes
- DIN film speed
- DIN connector
- Scuba: DIN connection, DIN connectors
- DQS - Deutsche Gesellschaft zur Zertifizierung von Managementsystemen, a subsidiary of DIN
- DGQ - Deutsche Gesellschaft für Qualität, founded DQS in 1985 together with DIN
External links
- DIN home page (German version)
- DIN home page (English version)
- Guidance paper Шаблон:Webarchive (in German)
- Further education (in German)
- Web Courses (official education partner) (in German)
- Safety instructions (official DIN education partner) (in German)
- Training for engineers, managers and experts (official education partner) (in German)
- International Organization for Standardization (ISO)
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