Extended Binary Coded Decimal Interchange Code (EBCDIC) have been used to represent the Japanese language on computers, including variants defined by Hitachi...
48 KB (1,813 words) - 20:29, 25 August 2024
Extended Binary Coded Decimal Interchange Code (EBCDIC; /ˈɛbsɪdɪk/) is an eight-bit character encoding used mainly on IBM mainframe and IBM midrange computer...
45 KB (2,515 words) - 20:11, 6 June 2025
Code page (redirect from EBCDIC code pages)
20278 20284 20285 20290 - Japanese language in EBCDIC 20297 20420 20423 20424 20833 20838 20866 – KOI8-R 20871 20880 – EBCDIC Cyrillic (880) 20905 20924...
93 KB (9,370 words) - 08:23, 4 February 2025
Character encoding (category Natural language and computing)
EBCDIC), an eight-bit encoding scheme developed in 1963 for the IBM System/360 that featured a larger character set, including lower case letters. In...
32 KB (3,919 words) - 10:47, 12 June 2025
ASCII (category All Wikipedia articles written in American English)
EBCDIC (1963), more than 64 codes were required for ASCII. ITA2 was in turn based on Baudot code, the 5-bit telegraph code Émile Baudot invented in 1870...
109 KB (8,057 words) - 18:31, 6 May 2025
ISO basic Latin alphabet (category Articles containing French-language text)
Association, which became the American National Standards Institute in 1969) 1963/1964: EBCDIC (developed by IBM and supporting the same alphabetic characters...
24 KB (1,638 words) - 17:48, 4 March 2025
ISO/IEC 2022 (category Articles containing Japanese-language text)
ISO/IEC standard in the field of character encoding. It is equivalent to the ECMA standard ECMA-35, the ANSI standard ANSI X3.41 and the Japanese Industrial...
108 KB (11,115 words) - 14:56, 21 May 2025
Yen and yuan sign (redirect from Japanese yen sign)
writing in Japanese and Chinese, the Japanese kanji or Chinese character is written following the amount, for example 50円 in Japan, and 50元 or 50圆 in China...
9 KB (838 words) - 14:32, 15 June 2025
ISO/IEC 8859-16 (category Computer-related introductions in 2001)
character encodings, first edition published in 2001. The same encoding was defined as Romanian Standard SR 14111 in 1998, named the "Romanian Character Set...
18 KB (343 words) - 08:45, 9 June 2025
ISO/IEC 8859-3 (category Turkish language)
series of ASCII-based standard character encodings, first edition published in 1988. It is informally referred to as Latin-3 or South European. It was designed...
17 KB (261 words) - 01:54, 26 August 2024
ISO/IEC 8859-8 (category Computer-related introductions in 1988)
second and current revision, preceded by the first edition ISO/IEC 8859-8:1988 in 1988. It is informally referred to as Latin/Hebrew. ISO/IEC 8859-8 covers...
25 KB (785 words) - 01:54, 26 August 2024
and Windows codepages). EBCDIC ("the other" major character code) likewise developed many extended variants (more than 186 EBCDIC codepages) over the decades...
15 KB (2,003 words) - 05:33, 8 June 2025
ISO/IEC 8859-9 (category Turkish language)
the Turkish language (and the vast majority of users use it for that language, even though it can also be used for some other languages), designed as...
21 KB (587 words) - 13:57, 1 January 2025
Code page 951 (category Encodings of Asian languages)
double byte component of their code page 949, an encoding for the Korean language. See Code page 949 (IBM). The code page number 951 was also used by Microsoft...
2 KB (244 words) - 22:31, 23 November 2023
can also be used to perform language detection. This process is not foolproof because it depends on statistical data. In general, incorrect charset detection...
5 KB (638 words) - 01:54, 13 June 2025
C0 and C1 control codes (category CS1 Japanese-language sources (ja))
Character Sets". National Language Support User's Guide (R212). Umamaheswaran, V.S. (1999-11-08). "3.3 Step 2: Byte Conversion". UTF-EBCDIC. Unicode Consortium...
40 KB (3,023 words) - 18:23, 6 June 2025
Windows code page (category CS1 Japanese-language sources (ja))
[The option to make UTF-8 the system locale added in Windows 10 Insider Preview]. スラド (in Japanese). Archived from the original on 2018-05-11. Retrieved...
45 KB (2,836 words) - 19:21, 24 March 2025
ISO/IEC 8859-11 (category Computer-related introductions in 2001)
874 ISO-IR 166 Thai character set (July 13, 1992, from Thai Standard TIS 620-2533 (1990)) Standardization and Implementations of Thai Language PDF 175k...
36 KB (685 words) - 09:05, 1 March 2025
T.51/ISO/IEC 6937 (category Computer-related introductions in 1983)
characters found in modern European languages using the Latin alphabet. Non-Latin European characters, such as Cyrillic and Greek, are not included in the standard...
35 KB (1,579 words) - 23:22, 16 March 2025
Extended Unix Code (redirect from Extended UNIX Code Packed Format for Japanese)
characters, including both kanji and non-kanji. JEF (Japanese-processing Extended Feature) is an EBCDIC encoding used on Fujitsu FACOM mainframes, contrasting...
45 KB (5,077 words) - 14:45, 11 May 2025
XML (redirect from EXtensible Markup Language)
The main changes are to enable the use of line-ending characters used on EBCDIC platforms, and the use of scripts and characters absent from Unicode 3.2...
59 KB (7,246 words) - 22:46, 19 June 2025
Halfwidth and fullwidth forms (section In Unicode)
similar treatment for Korean jamo, based on the N-byte Hangul code and its EBCDIC translation. For compatibility with existing character sets that contained...
6 KB (605 words) - 03:28, 12 June 2025
Xerox Character Code Standard (category Computer-related introductions in 1980)
in 1980 for the exchange of information between elements of the Xerox Network Systems Architecture. It encodes the characters required for languages using...
238 KB (458 words) - 02:24, 6 February 2025
IBM 5110 (category Computer-related introductions in 1978)
I/O devices (floppy disk drives, IEEE-488, RS-232) and a character set (EBCDIC) which was compatible with other IBM machines. These improvements made it...
7 KB (697 words) - 20:12, 25 August 2024
J (category Articles containing Thai-language text)
most of the languages of India, such as Hindi and Telugu, and stands for /dʑ/ in the romanization of Japanese and Korean. For Chinese languages, ⟨j⟩ stands...
26 KB (2,024 words) - 23:31, 18 June 2025
Mojibake (category Articles containing Japanese-language text)
letters. IBM mainframes use the EBCDIC encoding which does not match ASCII at all. The alphabets of the North Germanic languages, Catalan, Romanian, Finnish...
60 KB (5,936 words) - 03:17, 31 May 2025
Lotus Multi-Byte Character Set (category CS1 Japanese-language sources (ja))
used in IBM/Lotus SmartSuite, Notes and Domino, as well as in a number of third-party products. LMBCS encodes the characters required for languages using...
49 KB (1,511 words) - 09:34, 27 May 2025
KS X 1001 (category Articles containing Korean-language text)
for use as a Shift Out set with EBCDIC. That variant uses shift in and shift out to switch between a single-byte EBCDIC page and Johab, uses a different...
288 KB (3,981 words) - 14:43, 25 January 2025
Z (category Articles containing Japanese-language text)
noun), zett in Norwegian, zède in French, zetto (ゼット) in Japanese, and giét in Vietnamese (not part of its alphabet). Several languages render it as...
31 KB (2,881 words) - 20:18, 15 June 2025
PL/I (redirect from PLI programming language)
the character string concept was expanded to accommodate wide non-ASCII/EBCDIC strings. Time and date handling were overhauled to deal with the millennium...
97 KB (12,071 words) - 06:33, 31 May 2025