Return-Path: <@um.cc.umich.edu:Bruce_Jolliffe@mtsg.ubc.ca> Received: from umix.cc.umich.edu by CU20B.COLUMBIA.EDU with TCP; Wed 23 Mar 88 15:04:53-EST Received: by umix.cc.umich.edu (5.54/umix-2.0) id AA20587; Wed, 23 Mar 88 15:08:57 EST Received: from MTSG.UBC.CA by um.cc.umich.edu via MTS-Net; Wed, 23 Mar 88 14:54:46 EST Date: Wed, 23 Mar 88 11:53:14 PST From: Bruce_Jolliffe@mtsg.ubc.ca To: IBM-Kermit@cu20b.Columbia.edu, info-kermit@cu20b.Columbia.edu, iso8859%jhuvm@umix.cc.umich.edu, ibm7171%dearn@umix.cc.umich.edu Message-Id: <972890@mtsg.ubc.ca> Subject: ISO (ASCII) to EBCDIC Standards As one of several MTS sites that have recently adopted an ISO 8859 - Code Page 37 translation table I found your note on the adoption standard ASCII-EBCDIC tables interesting. We mapped each ISO graphic to its corresponding EBCDIC graphic. Thus we mapped the EBCDIC logical not (5F) into the ISO logical not (AC). Similarily we mapped the ISO circumflex into the EBCDIC circumflex (B0) and the ISO tilde (7F) into the EBCDIC tilde (A1). As you might guess the two thorniest issues over the IBM Code Page 37 was the square brackets and the logical not. As previously noted, in another message, the square brackets in Code Page 37 are moved from their traditional TN positions of AD and BD to BA and BB respectively. The second issue concerned the logical not. At most of the MTS sites we had traditionally mapped EBCDIC logical nots into tildes. After much debate we decided it made no sense to do cross graphics mapping and decided to go with a graphic to graphic mapping. Many of the MTS sites provide general access to their IBM mainframes exclusively through ASCII terminals. Thus many applications that used the logical not as an input character had to be changed to accept the EBCDIC tilde (we had previously mapped EBCDIC logical nots to ASCII tildes). Prior to the conversion there was a lot apprehension about changing to the newer standard and we prepared for the worse. Now the conversion has been done, and we can look back the conversion was more of a nuisance rather than a major hassle. Granted it was not free, but with a reasonable amount of preparation and saturation publicity the conversion can be relatively painless. The installations that have made this change include the University of Michigan, Renssellaer Polytechnic Institute, University of British Columbia, Simon Fraser University, University of Newcastle, Durham University, and Wayne State University. The University of Alberta, the other remaining major MTS site, is due to convert this summer. Bruce Jolliffe Computing Centre University of British Columbia Bruce_Jolliffe@mtsg.ubc.ca or USERBDJ@UBCMTSG.BITNET