On 2/15/25 12:34, Wayne S via cctalk wrote:
> 6 bit characters were used by CDC 24 bit machines. 4 chars per 24 bit word. 

There were *many* six-bit codes, even differing among systems offered by
the same vendor.  exempli gratia:  IBM 1401/1620/7090  CDC
1604/3000/6000; all different between the various machines.  CDC 6000
Display code is an interesting one; as the 00 code could either be an
end-of-record/line or a colon, depending on the placement in a 60 bit
word.  CDC also supported 6 bit ASCII subset on some of their systems.

I recall a proposal in the 70s being circulated around CDC CPD as to
what should be done to extend the nominally 63/64 character set to 8
bits.  The scheme that was eventually adopted repurposed some codes as
"escape" or prefix codes.  But there were proposals for 10 bit
characters (6 per word) and one that I was particularly fond of: 7.5
characters per word, each word being called a "snaque" (get it?
bit/byte/snaque...)

Univac used Fieldata well into the 80s, ISTR.

--Chuck

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