Sorry, I neglected to include the link.
https://www.ibm.com/support/pages/sites/default/files/inline-files/690450_SA22-7832-03.pdf

-- 
Tom Marchant

On Wed, 5 Jul 2023 14:48:59 -0500, Tom Marchant <m42tom-ibmm...@yahoo.com> 
wrote:

>On Wed, 5 Jul 2023 14:04:55 -0500, Paul Gilmartin <paulgboul...@aol.com> wrote:
>
>>I see no difference among these/  Are there others?
>>
>>513 $ printf '#$@' | iconv -f UTF-8 -t CP1047 | od -tx1
>>0000000 7b 5b 7c
>>0000003
>>514 $ printf '#$@' | iconv -f UTF-8 -t CP037  | od -tx1
>>0000000 7b 5b 7c
>>0000003
>>515 $ printf '#$@' | iconv -f UTF-8 -t CP500  | od -tx1
>>0000000 7b 5b 7c
>>0000003
>
>Perhaps Appendix I of this old POO will help. Especially note 4 on page I-4.
>
><quote>
>Five columns of EBCDIC graphics are shown. The first is the 81-character 
>character 
>set 0640, called the syntactic character set, that is mapped the same on all 
>EBCDIC 
>code pages. The second is the standard IBM 94-character character set mapped 
>on 
>code page 00037. The third is code page 00037, named USA/Canada - CECP (Country
>Extended Code Page). The fourth is code page 00500, named International #5. 
>The 
>fifth is code page 01047, named Latin 1/Open Systems. Code pages 00037, 00500, 
>01047, and 00819 (ISO-8) all map the 189-character character set 0697. 
>Source: National Language Support Reference Manual Volume 2, SE09-8002.
></quote>
>
>-- 
>Tom Marchant

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