Code page 437 has a series of international characters, mainly values 128 to 175 (80hex to AFhex). However, it only covers a few major Western European languages in full, including
English,
German and
Swedish, and so lacks several characters (mostly capital letters) important to many major Western European languages: •
Spanish: Á, Í, Ó, and Ú •
French: À, Â, È, Ê, Ë, Î, Ï, Ô, Œ, œ, Ù, Û, and Ÿ •
Portuguese: Á, À, Â, Ã, ã, Ê, Í, Ó, Ô, Õ, õ, and Ú •
Catalan: À, È, Í, Ï, Ò, Ó, and Ú •
Italian: À, È, Ì, Ò, and Ù •
Icelandic: Á, Ð, ð, Í, Ó, Ú, Ý, ý, Þ, and þ •
Danish/
Norwegian: Ø and ø. Character number 237 (EDhex), the small phi (closed form), could be used as a surrogate even though it may not render well (furthermore, it tends to map to Unicode, and/or render in Unicode fonts, as the open-form phi or the closed-vertical-form phi, which are even further from the O with stroke). To compensate, the
Danish/
Norwegian and
Icelandic code pages (
865 and
861) replaced cent sign (¢) with ø and the yen sign (¥) with Ø. • Most
Greek alphabet symbols were omitted, beyond the basic math symbols. (They were included in the Greek-language code pages
737 and
869. Some of the Greek symbols that were already in code page 437 had their glyphs changed from mathematical or scientific forms to match the actual use in Greek.) Along with the
cent (¢),
pound sterling (£) and
yen/
yuan (¥) currency symbols, it has a couple of former European currency symbols: the
florin (ƒ, Netherlands) and the
peseta (₧, Spain). The presence of the last is unusual, since the Spanish peseta was never an internationally relevant currency, and also never had a symbol of its own; it was simply abbreviated as "Pt", "Pta", "Pts", or "Ptas". Spanish models of the
IBM electric typewriter, however, also had a single position devoted to it. Later DOS character sets, such as
code page 850 (DOS Latin-1), code page 852 (DOS Central-European) and
code page 737 (DOS Greek), filled the gaps for international use with some compatibility with code page 437 by retaining the single and double box-drawing characters, while discarding the mixed ones (
e.g. horizontal double/vertical single). All code page 437 characters have similar glyphs in
Unicode and in Microsoft's
WGL4 character set, and therefore are available in most fonts in
Microsoft Windows, and also in the default VGA font of the
Linux kernel, and the
ISO 10646 fonts for
X11. == See also ==