NIST is asking for 64-bit code in ANSI C (no 64-bit types) and ISO 9660 formatted CDROMs with long filenames (nope)http://csrc.nist.gov/groups/ST/post-quantum-crypto/submission-requirements/digital-optical-media.html …
ANSI wrote the first version of the standard which was then adopted by ISO. ANSI then let ISO drive from then on.
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Yep. And "ANSI C" then continued to live it's own life, enforced by compilers, makefiles and coding convention pseudo-standards.
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For example major open source projects like BSD and Linux are not fully C99 yet; many non-ansi features are frowned upon there.
End of conversation
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