IBM PC or MS-DOS code page 437, often abbreviated CP437 and also known as DOS-US or OEM-US, is the original character set of the IBM PC, circa 1981. The following is a table representing CP437 using the equivalent Unicode characters:
| .0 | .1 | .2 | .3 | .4 | .5 | .6 | .7 | .8 | .9 | .A | .B | .C | .D | .E | .F | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
It is based on ASCII, with the following modifications:
The repertoire of CP437 was taken from the character set of Wang word-processing machines, according to Bill Gates in an interview with Gates and Paul Allen that in the 2nd of October 1995 edition of Fortune Magazine:
CP437 is inadequate for internationalisation, as it lacks characters necessary for some languages, such as À (capital A with grave) for French, and has only a few Greek letters. Later MS-DOS character sets, such as CP850 (DOS Latin-1), CP852 (DOS Central-European) and CP737 (DOS Greek), filled the gaps for international use while still being nearly compatible with CP437 by retaining most of the box-drawing characters. All CP437 characters are in Unicode and in Microsoft's WGL4 character set, therefore in most of the fonts on Microsoft Windows, and also in the default VGA font of the Linux kernel, and the ISO 10646 fonts for X11.
Implementors of mapping tables to Unicode should note that CP437 unifies some characters: 0xE1 is both the German sharp S (U+00DF, ß) and the Greek lowercase beta (U+03B2, β); 0xE4 is both the n-ary summation sign (U+2211, ∑) and the Greek uppercase sigma (U+03A3, Σ); 0xE6 is both the micro sign (U+00B5, µ) and the Greek lowercase mu (U+03BC, μ); 0xEA is both the Ohm sign (U+2126, Ω) and the Greek uppercase omega (U+03A9, Ω); and 0xEE is both the element-of sign (U+2208, ∈) and the Greek lowercase epsilon (U+03B5, ε).
Codepage 437 | CP437 | Codepage 437 | CP437 | CP437
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