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A Trademark ( *™ *) is not legally the same as a registered trademark
( *®* )



On Thu, Aug 13, 2015 at 7:01 PM, Henrik Rützou <hr@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

PS I use the site

http://www.easymarketplace.de/codepages.php

very usefull when you work with different EBCDIC CCSID and ASCII

On Thu, Aug 13, 2015 at 6:59 PM, Henrik Rützou <hr@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

To me x'AF' is *® in CCSID 37*

On Thu, Aug 13, 2015 at 6:52 PM, Mark Murphy/STAR BASE Consulting Inc. <
mmurphy@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

I don't know Henrik, looks like it is there to me. Aook at column A,
last row. It is the glyph Chuck mentioned.

Mark Murphy
STAR BASE Consulting, Inc.
mmurphy@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx


-----Henrik Rützou <hr@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: -----
To: "RPG programming on the IBM i (AS/400 and iSeries)" <
rpg400-l@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
From: Henrik Rützou <hr@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: 08/13/2015 12:48PM
Subject: Re: Printing the Trademark Symbol

CRPence

I believe you are wrong, here is a table of CCSID 37 characters ...

http://www.easymarketplace.de/cp/cp00037_US.pdf



On Thu, Aug 13, 2015 at 6:31 PM, John Yeung <gallium.arsenide@xxxxxxxxx>
wrote:

On Thu, Aug 13, 2015 at 10:34 AM, Vernon Hamberg
<vhamberg@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
The trademark symbol is just the letters TM, usually in a
superscript,
right? There's no circle around it, such as on copyright and
registered
symbols. But the trademark symbol is not in CCSID 37. Maybe another
font,
eh? Or it's very likely UTF-8 (CCSID 1208) - It might be U2122.

Normally Unicode code points are expressed with a plus sign, so
U+2122. But yes, that's the right code point for the trademark symbol.

By "another font" I assume you mean keep using CCSID 37, and use the
characters 'T' and 'M', but render them in a small font and/or make
them superscript?

That's definitely the mindset typists and typesetters needed when
their tools did not directly support the characters they were looking
for. (Relatively early typewriters economized by not having separate
numeral '1' and lowercase 'L'.)

But today, on modern computers, I would hope that you can just choose
a proper encoding (like UTF-8) and store the character
straightforwardly in that encoding. (I know, ivory tower concepts
don't always apply in the trenches.)

John Y.
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--
Regards,
Henrik Rützou

http://powerEXT.com <http://powerext.com/>
--
This is the RPG programming on the IBM i (AS/400 and iSeries) (RPG400-L)
mailing list
To post a message email: RPG400-L@xxxxxxxxxxxx
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--
Regards,
Henrik Rützou

http://powerEXT.com <http://powerext.com/>





--
Regards,
Henrik Rützou

http://powerEXT.com <http://powerext.com/>






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