Code page 310 (CCSID 310), known as "3270 APL Graphic Escape" [1] or "Graphic Escape APL/TN", [2] is an EBCDIC code page used on IBM mainframes to write the APL programming language. [3] It is used alongside Code page 37-2, [4] with the Code page 310 codes being prefixed by the Graphic Escape (EBCDIC 0x08) [5] control character. [6]
_0 | _1 | _2 | _3 | _4 | _5 | _6 | _7 | _8 | _9 | _A | _B | _C | _D | _E | _F | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
0_ | ||||||||||||||||
1_ | ||||||||||||||||
2_ | ||||||||||||||||
3_ | ||||||||||||||||
4_ | SP 0020 | 𝐴̲ 1D434 0332 | 𝐵̲ 1D435 0332 | 𝐶̲ 1D436 0332 | 𝐷̲ 1D437 0332 | 𝐸̲ 1D438 0332 | 𝐹̲ 1D439 0332 | 𝐺̲ 1D43A 0332 | 𝐻̲ 1D43B 0332 | 𝐼̲ 1D43C 0332 | ||||||
5_ | 𝐽̲ 1D43D 0332 | 𝐾̲ 1D43E 0332 | 𝐿̲ 1D43F 0332 | 𝑀̲ 1D440 0332 | 𝑁̲ 1D441 0332 | 𝑂̲ 1D442 0332 | 𝑃̲ 1D443 0332 | 𝑄̲ 1D444 0332 | 𝑅̲ 1D445 0332 | |||||||
6_ | 𝑆̲ 1D446 0332 | 𝑇̲ 1D447 0332 | 𝑈̲ 1D448 0332 | 𝑉̲ 1D449 0332 | 𝑊̲ 1D44A 0332 | 𝑋̲ 1D44B 0332 | 𝑌̲ 1D44C 0332 | 𝑍̲ 1D44D 0332 | ||||||||
7_ | ◊/⋄/◆ [lower-alpha 1] 25CA/22C4/25C6 | ∧/⋀ [lower-alpha 1] 2227/22C0 | ¨ 00A8 | ⌻ 233B | ⍸ 2378 | ⍷ 2377 | ⊢ 22A2 | ⊣ 22A3 | ∨ 2228 | |||||||
8_ | ∼/~ [lower-alpha 1] 223C/007E | ║ 2551 | ═ 2550 | ⎸ 23B8 | ⎹ 23B9 | │/⎥ [lower-alpha 1] 2502/23A5 | ↑ 2191 | ↓ 2193 | ≤ 2264 | ⌈ 2308 | ⌊ 230A | → 2192 | ||||
9_ | ⎕ 2395 | ▌ 258C | ▐ 2590 | ▀ 2580 | ▄ 2584 | █/■ [lower-alpha 1] 2588/25A0 | ⊃ 2283 | ⊂ 2282 | ⌑/¤ [lower-alpha 1] 2311/00A4 | ○ 25CB | ± 00B1 | ← 2190 | ||||
A_ | ¯/‾ [lower-alpha 1] 00AF/203E | ° 00B0 | ─ 2500 | ∙/• [lower-alpha 1] 2219/2022 | ₙ 2099 | ∩/⋂ [lower-alpha 1] 2229/22C2 | ∪/⋃ [lower-alpha 1] 222A/22C3 | ⊥ 22A5 | [ 005B | ≥ 2265 | ∘ 2218 | |||||
B_ | ⍺/α [lower-alpha 1] 237A/03B1 | ∊/∈/ε [lower-alpha 1] 220A/2208/03B5 | ⍳/ι [lower-alpha 1] 2373/03B9 | ⍴/ρ [lower-alpha 1] 2374/03C1 | ⍵/ω [lower-alpha 1] 2375/03C9 | × 00D7 | ∖/\ [lower-alpha 1] 2216/005C | ÷ 00F7 | ∇ 2207 | ∆ 2206 | ⊤ 22A4 | ] 005D | ≠ 2260 | ∣/│ [lower-alpha 1] 2223/2502 | ||
C_ | { 007B | ⁽ 207D | ⁺/+ [lower-alpha 1] 207A/002B | ■/∎ [lower-alpha 1] 25A0/220E | └ 2514 | ┌ 250C | ├ 251C | ┴ 2534 | § 00A7 | ⍲ 2372 | ⍱ 2371 | ⌷ 2337 | ⌽ 233D | ⍂ 2342 | ⍉ 2349 | |
D_ | } 007D | ⁾ 207E | ⁻/- [lower-alpha 1] 207B/002D | ┼ 253C | ┘ 2518 | ┐ 2510 | ┤ 2524 | ┬ 252C | ¶ 00B6 | ⌶ 2336 | ǃ/! [lower-alpha 1] 01C3/0021 | ⍒ 2352 | ⍋ 234B | ⍞ 235E | ⍝ 235D | |
E_ | ≡ 2261 | ₁ 2081 | ₂ 2082 | ₃ 2083 | ⍤ [lower-alpha 2] 2364 | ⍥ [lower-alpha 2] 2365 | ⍪ [lower-alpha 2] 236A | € [lower-alpha 2] 20AC | ⌿ 233F | ⍀ 2340 | ∵ 2235 | ⊖ 2296 | ⌹ 2339 | ⍕ 2355 | ||
F_ | ⁰ 2070 | ¹ 00B9 | ² 00B2 | ³ 00B3 | ⁴ 2074 | ⁵ 2075 | ⁶ 2076 | ⁷ 2077 | ⁸ 2078 | ⁹ 2079 | ⍫ 236B | ⍙ 2359 | ⍟ 235F | ⍎ 234E |
Letter Number Punctuation Symbol Other Undefined
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Windows-1252 or CP-1252 is a single-byte character encoding of the Latin alphabet, used by default in the legacy components of Microsoft Windows for English and many European languages including Spanish, French, and German.
ISO/IEC 8859-11:2001, Information technology — 8-bit single-byte coded graphic character sets — Part 11: Latin/Thai alphabet, is part of the ISO/IEC 8859 series of ASCII-based standard character encodings, first edition published in 2001. It is informally referred to as Latin/Thai. It is nearly identical to the national Thai standard TIS-620 (1990). The sole difference is that ISO/IEC 8859-11 allocates non-breaking space to code 0xA0, while TIS-620 leaves it undefined.
ISO/IEC 8859-4:1998, Information technology — 8-bit single-byte coded graphic character sets — Part 4: Latin alphabet No. 4, is part of the ISO/IEC 8859 series of ASCII-based standard character encodings, first edition published in 1988. It is informally referred to as Latin-4 or North European. It was designed to cover Estonian, Latvian, Lithuanian, Greenlandic, and Sami. It has been largely superseded by ISO/IEC 8859-10 and Unicode. Microsoft has assigned code page 28594 a.k.a. Windows-28594 to ISO-8859-4 in Windows. IBM has assigned code page 914 to ISO 8859-4.
ISO/IEC 8859-7:2003, Information technology — 8-bit single-byte coded graphic character sets — Part 7: Latin/Greek alphabet, is part of the ISO/IEC 8859 series of ASCII-based standard character encodings, first edition published in 1987. It is informally referred to as Latin/Greek. It was designed to cover the modern Greek language. The original 1987 version of the standard had the same character assignments as the Greek national standard ELOT 928, published in 1986. The table in this article shows the updated 2003 version which adds three characters. Microsoft has assigned code page 28597 a.k.a. Windows-28597 to ISO-8859-7 in Windows. IBM has assigned code page 813 to ISO 8859-7. (IBM CCSID 813 is the original encoding. CCSID 4909 adds the euro sign. CCSID 9005 further adds the drachma sign and ypogegrammeni.)
Windows-1258 is a code page used in Microsoft Windows to represent Vietnamese texts. It makes use of combining diacritical marks.
Windows code pages are sets of characters or code pages used in Microsoft Windows from the 1980s and 1990s. Windows code pages were gradually superseded when Unicode was implemented in Windows, although they are still supported both within Windows and other platforms, and still apply when Alt code shortcuts are used.
The programming language APL uses a number of symbols, rather than words from natural language, to identify operations, similarly to mathematical symbols. Prior to the wide adoption of Unicode, a number of special-purpose EBCDIC and non-EBCDIC code pages were used to represent the symbols required for writing APL.
Code page 864 is a code page used to write Arabic in Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, and Syria.
Code page 867 is a Hebrew 8-bit code page defined by IBM in 1998. It is based on Code page 862 but replaces several characters not used in Hebrew with nonprinting characters for bidirectional text support, a euro sign and a shekel sign.
Code page 895 is a 7-bit character set and is Japan's national ISO 646 variant. It is the Roman set of the JIS X 0201 Japanese Standard and is variously called Japan 7-Bit Latin, JISCII, JIS Roman, JIS C6220-1969-ro, ISO646-JP or Japanese-Roman. Its ISO-IR registration number is 14.
IBM code page 936 was a character encoding for Simplified Chinese including 1880 UDC. It was a combination of the single-byte Code page 903 and the double-byte Code page 928.
Code page 293 is EBCDIC code page used by IBM mainframes. It used to write source code for the APL programming language.
Code page 896, called Japan 7-Bit Katakana Extended, is IBM's code page for code-set G2 of EUC-JP, a 7-bit code page representing the Kana set of JIS X 0201 and accompanying Code page 895 which corresponds to the lower half of that standard. It encodes half-width katakana.
Code page 921 is a code page used under IBM AIX and DOS to write the Estonian, Latvian, and Lithuanian languages. It is an extension of ISO/IEC 8859-13.
Code page 922 is a code page used under IBM AIX and DOS to write the Estonian language. It is an extension and modification of ISO/IEC 8859-1, where the letters Ð/ð and Þ/þ used for Icelandic are replaced by the letters Š/š and Ž/ž respectively. This matches the encoding of these letters in Windows-1257 and ISO/IEC 8859-13.
Code page 1042, also known as Simplified Chinese PC Data Extended, is a single byte character set (SBCS) used by IBM in its PC DOS operating system in China. This code page is intended for use with code page 928.
Code page 1115, also known as Simplified Chinese PC Data, is a single byte character set (SBCS) used by IBM in its PC DOS operating system in China.
Code page 37, known as "USA/Canada - CECP", is an EBCDIC code page used on IBM mainframes. It encodes the ISO/IEC 8859-1 repertoire of graphic characters.
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