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  1. IBM therefore developed their own EBCDIC (Extended Binary Coded Decimal Interchange Code) for use with punch card peripherals, and still uses it on mainframes today. It is probably the next most well known character set due to the proliferation of IBM midrange and mainframes.

  2. The following table is an EBCDIC-to-ASCII conversion table that translates 8-bit EBCDIC characters to 7-bit ASCII characters. All EBCDIC characters that cannot be represented in 7 bits are represented by the ASCII character 0x1A.

  3. This table lists the standard ASCII characters in numerical order with the corresponding decimal and hexadecimal values. For convenience in working with programs that use EBCDIC character values, the corresponding information for EBCDIC characters is also included.

  4. A conversion or translation chart or table for ASCII, EBCDIC, Binary, bit, hex, hexadecimal, decimal or text. Includes alternate codes for the currency symbols (dollar sign, British Pound and Japanese Yen), the umlaut, acute, grave, circumflex, tilde, Copyright and Trademark.

  5. This section presents tables showing EBCDIC to ASCII and ASCII to EBCDIC conversion tables. In the table headers, EBC refers to EBCDIC and ASC refers to ASCII. Table 1 shows the EBCDIC to ASCII default conversion table.

  6. ASCII/EBCDIC Translation Tables ASCII EBCDIC Decimal HEX Character Decimal Hex Character 000 00 NUL 000 00 NUL 001 01 001 01 002 02 002 02 003 03 003 03 ... ASCII EBCDIC Decimal HEX Character Decimal Hex Character 096 60 ` 096 60 - 097 61 a 097 61 / 098 62 b 098 62 099 63 c 099 63 100 64 d 100 64 ...

  7. EBCDIC is an acronym for Extended Binary Coded Decimal Interchange Code. It is a single byte (8 bit) character encoding standard that is used in the IBM mainframe environment. IBM didn't invent just one version of EBCDIC either but several different incompatible versions.

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