<
character, standard> /eb's*-dik/, /eb'see'dik/, /eb'k*-dik/,
/ee'bik'dik'/, /*-bik'dik'/ (EBCDIC) A proprietary 8-bit
character set used on
IBM dinosaurs, the
AS/400, and
e-Server.
EBCDIC is an extension to 8 bits of BCDIC (Binary Coded
Decimal Interchange Code), an earlier 6-bit character set used
on IBM computers. EBCDIC was [
first?] used on the successful
System/360, anounced on 1964-04-07, and survived for many
years despite the almost universal adoption of
ASCII
elsewhere. Was this concern for
backward compatibility or,
as many believe, a marketing strategy to lock in IBM
customers?
IBM created 57 national EBCDIC character sets and an
International Reference Version (IRV) based on
ISO 646 (and
hence ASCII compatible). Documentation on these was not
easily accessible making international exchange of data even
between IBM mainframes a tricky task.
US EBCDIC uses more or less the same characters as
ASCII,
but different
code points. It has non-contiguous letter
sequences, some ASCII characters do not exist in EBCDIC
(e.g.
square brackets), and EBCDIC has some (
cent sign,
not sign) not in ASCII. As a consequence, the translation
between ASCII and EBCDIC was never officially completely
defined. Users defined one translation which resulted in a
so-called de-facto EBCDIC containing all the characters of
ASCII, that all ASCII-related programs use.
Some printers, telex machines, and even electronic cash
registers can speak EBCDIC, but only so they can converse with
IBM mainframes.
For an in-depth discussion of character code sets, and full
translation tables, see {
Guidelines on 8-bit character codes
(ftp://ftp.ulg.ac.be/pub/docs/iso8859/iso8859.networking)}.
{
A history of character codes
(http://tronweb.super-nova.co.jp/characcodehist.html)}.
E.g. the EBCDIC code for "A" is
hexadecimal "C1".
(2002-03-03)