CWI-2

Nowadays, CWI-2 has become a topic of great importance and relevance in today's society. With the advancement of technology and globalization, CWI-2 has positioned itself as a fundamental element in people's daily lives. From its impact on the economy to its influence on interpersonal relationships, CWI-2 has acquired an undisputed prominence in different aspects of contemporary life. In this article, we will explore the many facets of CWI-2 and discuss its importance in the current context, as well as the possible implications it has for the future.

CWI-2 (a.k.a. CWI, cp-hu, HUCWI, or HU8CWI2) is a Hungarian code page frequently used in the 1980s and early 1990s. If this code page is erroneously interpreted as code page 437, it will still be fairly readable (e.g. Á in place of Å).

Character set

The following table shows "CWI-2". Each character is shown with its equivalent Unicode code point. Only the second half is shown, codes less than 128 are identical to code page 437.

CWI-2
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 A B C D E F
8x Ç ü é â ä à å ç ê ë è ï î Í Ä Á
9x É æ Æ ő ö Ó ű Ú Ű Ö Ü ¢ £ ¥ ƒ
Ax á í ó ú ñ Ñ ª Ő ¿ ¬ ½ ¼ ¡ « »
Bx
Cx
Dx
Ex α ß Γ π Σ σ µ τ Φ Θ Ω δ φ ε
Fx ± ÷ ° · ² NBSP
  Differences from code page 437

The Unicode encoding used by recode appears to differ in a number of code points:

9F | U+E01F | HUNGARIAN FLORIN (CWI_9F)
E1 | U+03B2 | GREEK SMALL LETTER BETA
E6 | U+03BC | GREEK SMALL LETTER MU
ED | U+2205 | EMPTY SET
F8 | U+2218 | RING OPERATOR
F9 | U+00B7 | MIDDLE DOT
FA | U+2022 | BULLET

Several applications developed in Hungary use almost identical character sets with slight modifications, which include § (U+00A7, SECTION SIGN) at 0x9D and a forint sign (an upper-case F and lower-case t ligated into a single character) at 0x9E or 0xA8. The florin sign was planned to be disunified, but so many encodings have this, it would disrupt many mappings. The forint is usually abbreviated as "Ft"; most Hungarians recognize a lower-case "f" (whether upright or cursive) as meaning fillér, the now-unused subdivision of the forint. Some dot matrix printers of the NEC Pinwriter series, namely the P3200/P3300 (P20/P30), P6200/P6300 (P60/P70), P9300 (P90), P7200/P7300 (P62/P72), P22Q/P32Q, P3800/P3900 (P42Q/P52Q), P1200/P1300 (P2Q/P3Q), P2000 (P2X) and P8000 (P72X), supported the installation of optional font EPROMs. Named "CWI" the optional ROM #7 "Hungaria" included this encoding, invokable via escape sequence ESC R (n) with (n) = 21.

CWI-1

The codepage CWI-1 differs only by the position of "Í" (U+00CD, LATIN CAPITAL LETTER I WITH ACUTE) on position 8C instead of 8D and "Ő" (U+0150, LATIN CAPITAL LETTER O WITH DOUBLE ACUTE) on position 8B instead of A7. This codepage is known by Star printers and FreeDOS as Code page 3845.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "CWI-2". Computerworld Számítástechnika. 1.0. 3 (13). 1988-06-29.
  2. ^ a b Flohr, Guido (2009) . "Locale::RecodeData::CWI - Conversion routines for CWI". CPAN libintl-perl. 1.0. Archived from the original on 2016-06-06. Retrieved 2016-06-06.
  3. ^ Baird, Cathy; Chiba, Dan; Chu, Winson; Fan, Jessica; Ho, Claire; Law, Simon; Lee, Geoff; Linsley, Peter; Matsuda, Keni; Oscroft, Tamzin; Takeda, Shige; Tanaka, Linus; Tozawa, Makoto; Trute, Barry; Tsujimoto, Mayumi; Wu, Ying; Yau, Michael; Yu, Tim; Wang, Chao; Wong, Simon; Zhang, Weiran; Zheng, Lei; Zhu, Yan; Moore, Valarie (2002) . "Appendix A: Locale Data" (PDF). Oracle9i Database Globalization Support Guide (Release 2 (9.2) ed.). Oracle Corporation. Oracle A96529-01. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2017-02-14. Retrieved 2017-02-14.
  4. ^ "Proposal to encode a Florin currency symbol" (PDF).
  5. ^ a b Pinwriter Familie - Pinwriter - Epromsockel - Zusätzliche Zeichensätze / Schriftarten (Printed reference manual for optional font and code page EPROMs for NEC Pinwriters, including custom variants) (in German) (00 3/93 ed.), NEC Deutschland GmbH, 1993
  6. ^ Láng, Attila D. (2001-10-15). Drótos, László (ed.). "Íráskalauz" [Guide to Writing] (in Hungarian). Hungarian Electronic Library. Retrieved 2017-10-20.