MIME / IANA | IBM857 |
---|---|
Alias(es) | cp857, 857 [1] |
Transforms / Encodes | ISO 8859-9 |
Code page 857 (CCSID 857) [2] (also known as CP 857, IBM 00857, and OEM 857, [3] MS-DOS Turkish [4] ) is a code page used under DOS in Turkey to write Turkish. [5]
Code page 857 is based on code page 850, but with many changes. It includes all characters from ISO 8859-9.
CCSID 9049 is the euro currency update of code page/CCSID 857, which adds the euro sign at code point D5hex. [5] [6]
Each character is shown with its equivalent Unicode code point. Only the second half of the table (code points 128–255) is shown, the first half (code points 0–127) being the same as code page 850.
0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | A | B | C | D | E | F | |
8x | Ç | ü | é | â | ä | à | å | ç | ê | ë | è | ï | î | ı | Ä | Å |
9x | É | æ | Æ | ô | ö | ò | û | ù | İ | Ö | Ü | ø | £ | Ø | Ş | ş |
Ax | á | í | ó | ú | ñ | Ñ | Ğ | ğ | ¿ | ® | ¬ | ½ | ¼ | ¡ | « | » |
Bx | ░ | ▒ | ▓ | │ | ┤ | Á | Â | À | © | ╣ | ║ | ╗ | ╝ | ¢ | ¥ | ┐ |
Cx | └ | ┴ | ┬ | ├ | ─ | ┼ | ã | Ã | ╚ | ╔ | ╩ | ╦ | ╠ | ═ | ╬ | ¤ |
Dx | º | ª | Ê | Ë | È | € | Í | Î | Ï | ┘ | ┌ | █ | ▄ | ¦ | Ì | ▀ |
Ex | Ó | ß | Ô | Ò | õ | Õ | µ | × | Ú | Û | Ù | ì | ÿ | ¯ | ´ | |
Fx | SHY | ± | ¾ | ¶ | § | ÷ | ¸ | ° | ¨ | · | ¹ | ³ | ² | ■ | NBSP |
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.
Windows-1258 is a code page used in Microsoft Windows to represent Vietnamese texts. It makes use of combining diacritical marks.
Code page 850 is a code page used under DOS operating systems in Western Europe. Depending on the country setting and system configuration, code page 850 is the primary code page and default OEM code page in many countries, including various English-speaking locales, whilst other English-speaking locales default to the hardware code page 437.
Code page 855 is a code page used under DOS to write Cyrillic script.
Code page 866 is a code page used under DOS and OS/2 in Russia to write Cyrillic script. It is based on the "alternative code page" developed in 1984 in IHNA AS USSR and published in 1986 by a research group at the Academy of Science of the USSR. The code page was widely used during the DOS era because it preserves all of the pseudographic symbols of code page 437 and maintains alphabetic order of Cyrillic letters. Initially this encoding was only available in the Russian version of MS-DOS 4.01 (1990), but with MS-DOS 6.22 it became available in any language version.
Code page 852 is a code page used under DOS to write Central European languages that use Latin script.
Code page 865 is a code page used under DOS in Denmark and Norway to write Nordic languages.
Code page 860 is a code page used under DOS in Portugal to write Portuguese and it is also suitable to write Spanish and Italian. In Brazil, however, the most widespread codepage – and that which DOS in Brazilian Portuguese used by default – was code page 850.
Code page 863 is a code page used under DOS in Canada to write French although it lacks the letters Æ, æ, Œ, œ, Ÿ and ÿ.
Code page 737 is a code page used under DOS to write the Greek language. It was much more popular than code page 869 although it lacks the letters ΐ and ΰ.
Code page 869 is a code page used under DOS to write Greek and may also be used to get Greek letters for other uses such as math. It is also called DOS Greek 2. It was designed to include all characters from ISO 8859-7.
Code page 861 is a code page used under DOS in Iceland to write the Icelandic language.
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.
Code page 862 is a code page used under DOS in Israel for Hebrew.
Code page 775 is a code page used under DOS to write the Estonian, Lithuanian and Latvian languages. In Lithuania, this code page is standardised as LST 1590-1, alongside the related Code page 778.
Code page 720 is a code page used under DOS to write Arabic in Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, and Syria. The Windows (ANSI) code page for Arabic is Windows-1256.
Code page 851 is a code page used under DOS to write Greek language although it lacks the letters Ϊ and Ϋ. It covers the German language as well. It also covers some accented letters of the French language, but it lacks most of the accented capital letters required for French. It is also called MS-DOS Greek 1.
Code page 856, is a code page used under DOS for Hebrew in Israel.
Code page 859 is a code page used under DOS to write Western European languages. It contains all of the characters in ISO 8859-15.
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. The original code page matched ISO/IEC 8859-13 directly.