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Code page 862 is the code page used to write Hebrew language. Only the extended character set differs from the original code page, both the control characters and the standard character set being plain ASCII. The character table below is showing a pixel precise graphical representation for each character, alongside with a text description.
Standard Ascii Table. American Standard Code for Information Interchange . Select a table from the list: ... ISO/IEC 8859-8:1999 Latin/Hebrew Alphabet. ISO/IEC 8859-9:1999 Latin Alphabet No. 5 . koi8-r (Russian U*IX encoding) ... MS-DOS Codepage 862 (Israel) MS-DOS Codepage 863 (French Canadian) MS-DOS Codepage 864 (Arabic) ...
This page contains a table of IBM PC Code Page 862 for Hebrew. The CP862 characters are included literally within the brackets at the left of each row. If you save this page, you will have a CP862 table you can use to test your terminal emulator's character set configuration.
These characters are encoded in ISO-8859-8 and Windows-1255 with the octet that has the same number as the position in UCS. Glyphs for these characters (in PDF; from unicode.org). Position in UCS. Character.
This is a list of Hebrew characters such as letters, symbols, punctuation marks available under different ASCII character sets. Under each ASCII character you will find more detailed information about under which character set you find the character.
Codepages / Ascii Table ISO/IEC 8859-8:1999 Latin/Hebrew Alphabet :: ascii, ascii table, codepage, code page, extended
The ASCII table, when defined according to the ISO-8859-8 character encoding (also known as iso-ir-138, hebrew, csISOLatinHebrew), includes ASCII control characters and ASCII printable characters. Moreover, it also includes the extended ASCII character set unique to ISO-8859-8.