Country codes of SerbiaCountry codes for Serbia are short alphanumeric identification codes for country with primary use in data processing and communications. As Serbia and Montenegro dissolved in 2006, Serbia consequently restored its independence and dealt with the issue of assignment of country codes. List of codesTwo-letter ISO 3166-1 alpha-2The task of assigning a two-letter ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 code for Serbia, which could seem trivial, was made hugely complex by the number of countries having names which begin with the letter S. All combinations of As this code is also to be used as Internet top-level domain for the country, there had been rumours of approaching either International Organization for Standardization, United Nations or one of the countries having names which begin with the letter S in order to switch the codes. Negotiating the purchase or usage of the .sj Internet domain reserved for Svalbard and Jan Mayen was not a plausible option as Norway, which administers this (through UNINETT Norid), has a policy of not commercializing or disposing of this domain.[1] The Government of Serbia made an official request that the alpha-2 code for Serbia should be Three-letter ISO 3166-1 alpha-3The task of assigning an alpha-3 code was a somewhat less complex task than that of the alpha-2 code, the main issue being the choice between the English mnemonic The Institute for Standardisation of Serbia, in line with the proposed alpha-2 code ( ISO 4217ISO 4217 code is used for national currency, in this case the Serbian dinar. This three-letter code is composed of, by rule, first two letters of the ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 and a third letter is initial of the currency itself: International licence plate codeCountries generally take on the shortest licence plate code possible. Abbreviation Government of Serbia, however, have decided that the international license plate code for Serbia should (and could only) be its ISO-3166-1 alpha-3 code, Country calling codeSerbia kept the telephone country calling code previously assigned to Serbia and Montenegro, +381. Serbia and Montenegro received the code of +381 following the breakup of the Yugoslavia in 1992 (which had +38 as country code). Montenegro switched to +382 after its independence in 2006, while previous Yugoslav country code +38 was divided as follows: +380 for Ukraine, +383 for Kosovo, +385 for Croatia, +386 for Slovenia, +387 for Bosnia and Herzegovina and +389 for North Macedonia.[6] Country TLD codeSerbia and Montenegro used the .yu country code top-level domain when still called the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. In September 2006 IANA assigned .rs as the top-level domain for Serbia. Since 2011, there has been active .срб (abbreviation of Serbian: Србија; romanized as .srb), the internationalised (Cyrillic) country code TLD for Serbia. See also
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