EBCDIC 8859
Encyclopedia
CCSID Euro
Update
Countries
037  1140 Australia, Brazil, Canada, New Zealand, Portugal, South Africa, USA
273 1141 Austria, Germany
277 1142 Denmark, Norway
278 1143 Finland, Sweden
280 1144 Italy
284 1145 Latin America, Spain
285
EBCDIC 285
IBM code page 285 is an EBCDIC code page with full Latin-1-charset used in IBM mainframes. It is used in Ireland and the United Kingdom.CCSID 1146 is the Euro currency update of code page/CCSID 285...

 
1146 Ireland, United Kingdom
297 1147 France
500
EBCDIC 500
IBM code page 500 is an EBCDIC code page with full Latin-1-charset used in IBM mainframes.CCSID 1148 is the Euro currency update of code page/CCSID 500. Byte 9F is replaced ¤ with € in that code page.-Codepage layout:...

 
1148 International
871 1149 Iceland
1047
EBCDIC 1047
Code page 01047 is an EBCDIC code page with the full Latin-1 character set.It is possible to translate the character codes from the CP 01047 charset to ISO 8859-1 character codes, so that translation back to the CP 01047 charset is an exact value-preserving round-trip conversion....

 
924 Open Systems ( MVS C compiler )


1st number ( e.g. 500 ): EBCDIC
EBCDIC
Extended Binary Coded Decimal Interchange Code is an 8-bit character encoding used mainly on IBM mainframe and IBM midrange computer operating systems....

 code page
Code page
Code page is another term for character encoding. It consists of a table of values that describes the character set for a particular language. The term code page originated from IBM's EBCDIC-based mainframe systems, but many vendors use this term including Microsoft, SAP, and Oracle Corporation...

 CCSID
CCSID
CCSID is an abbreviation used by IBM to mean "Coded Character Set Identifier". It is a 16-bit number that represents a specific encoding of a specific code page...

 number with full Latin-1-charset

2nd number ( e.g. 1148 ): the same code page, but currency ¤
Currency sign
A currency sign is a graphic symbol used as a shorthand for a currency's name, especially in reference to amounts of money. They typically employ the first letter or character of the currency, sometimes with minor changes such as ligatures or overlaid vertical or horizontal bars...

replaced by euro €
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