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Extended Binary Coded Decimal Interchange Code (
EBCDIC; /ˈɛbsɪdɪk/) is an eight-bit
character encoding used
mainly on IBM
mainframe and IBM
midrange computer...
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EBCDIC is a
character encoding capable of
encoding all 1,112,064
valid character code
points in
Unicode using 1 to 5
bytes (in
contrast to a maximum...
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Character encoding § Terminology.) The term "code page"
originated from IBM's
EBCDIC-based
mainframe systems, but Microsoft, SAP, and
Oracle Corporation are...
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incompatible versions of the
Extended Binary Coded Decimal Interchange Code (
EBCDIC) have been used to
represent the ****anese
language on computers, including...
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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...
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character set for US
English EBCDIC (optional
characters were
available for US ASCII, and UK, French, German, and
Italian EBCDIC). On the 3275 and 3277 terminals...
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USASCII with 128
characters and
EBCDIC with 256
characters looked forward.
Transcode disappeared very
quickly but the
EBCDIC and
USASCII dialects of Bisync...
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Except for SS2 and SS3 in EUC-JP text, and NEL in text
transcoded from
EBCDIC, the 8-bit
forms of
these codes were
almost never used. CSI, DCS and OSC...
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other computer systems. The ¥ is ****igned code
point B2 in
EBCDIC 500 and many
other EBCDIC code pages.
Under Chinese Pinyin input method editors (IMEs)...
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Extended Binary-Coded
Decimal Interchange Code (usually
abbreviated as
EBCDIC), an eight-bit
encoding scheme developed in 1963 for the IBM System/360...