On Thu, Oct 23, 2003 at 04:49:51PM +0200, jean-frederic clere wrote: > Register EBCDIC Character Set "OSD_EBCDIC_DF04_1" > > This document provides information about character encoding > OSD_EBCDIC_DF04_1 > (Fujitsu-Siemens standard mainframe EBCDIC encoding, which is widely spread > in > Europe) which is a de-facto standard in Europe for information interchange > on > BS2000 mainframe systems of Fujitsu-Siemens Computer. > > The proposed character set "OSD_EBCDIC_DF04_1" is currently used by a large > user > community using BS2000 mainframe systems. > > Originally, specification of proposed standard "OSD_EBCDIC_DF04_1" was > officially adopted by the BS2000 systems and is documented in the Fujitsu- > Siemens Manual of the product XHCS > http://manuals.fujitsu-siemens.com/servers/bs2_man/man_us/dcam/v14_0/xhcs.pdf > (page 136f). > > OSD_EBCDIC_DF04_1 is developed as a single byte encoding for all > contemporary > characters. > > > The reference table between OSD_EBCDIC_DF04_1 and Unicode is shown below. > > > Unicode mapping: > > General notes: # > Column #1 is the OSD_EBCDIC_DF04_1 code (in hex) > Column #2 is the Unicode (in hex as 0xXXXX) Coloumn 2 could also be described as the ISO/IEC 10646 canonical code. Maybe say "ISO/IEC 10646/Unicode" > Column #3 is the RFC1345 name (follows a comment sign, '#') Hmm, coloumn 3 is a name that is referenced in rfc 1345, but it is more correctly described as the ISO/IEC 10646 or ISO/IEC 4873 long character name., as RFC 1345 took these names from these sources. Best regards Keld Simonsen Editor RFC 1345Received on Thursday, 23 October 2003 20:35:23 GMT
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