GEM character set

The GEM character set is the character set of Digital Research's graphical user interface GEM on Intel platforms. It is based on code page 437, the original character set of the IBM PC, and like that set includes ASCII codes 32–126, extended codes for accented letters (diacritics), and other symbols. It differs from code page 437 in using other dingbats at code points 0–31, in exchanging the box-drawing characters 176–223 for international characters and other symbols, and exchanging code point 236 with the symbol for line integral.. However, GEM is more similar to code page 865 because the codepoints of Ø and ø match the codepoints in that codepage.

The Motorola-based GEM adaption for the Atari ST family of computers utilized the similar Atari ST character set. It has swapped ¢ and ø and has also swapped ¥ and Ø (to match code page 437 more). It also has the sharp S (sharp s) at code point 158, reversed not sign (⌐) at code point 169 (as in code page 437), not sign (¬) at code point 170 (as in code page 437), ½ at code point 171 (as in code page 437), ¼ at code point 172 (as in code page 437), ¨ (diaeresis) at code point 184, ´ (acute) at code point 185, ij at code point 192, IJ at code point 193, Hebrew characters at code points 194-220, section sign (§) at code point 221, logical and at code point 222, infinity sign at code point 223, bullet (•) at codepoint 249, cubed sign (superscript three) at code point 254, the macron at code point 255, ATARI-specific characters at codepoints 5, 6, 7, 14, 15, 28, 29, 30, and 31, LED 0-9 at codepoints 16-25, and ə (Schwa) at codepoint 26. Codepoints 12, 13, and 27 are mapped to the C0 controls.

A slight adaption for Ventura Publisher is the similar Ventura International character set, it has code points 0-31, 127, and 218-255 empty, and has swapped ¢ and ø and has also swapped ¥ and Ø (to match code page 437 more).

In contrast to this, the GEM-derived file manager ViewMAX, which shipped with some versions of DR DOS as a DOSSHELL replacement, does not use the GEM character set, but loads its display fonts from DOS .CPI files[1][2][3][4][5][6] depending on the system's current code page.

Character set

The following table shows the GEM character set. Each character is shown with a potential Unicode equivalent, although some codes do not have a unique, single Unicode equivalent; the correct choice may depend upon context. Note that code point 20 (1416) has an unfilled paragraph sign, and code point 188 (BC16) has a filled paragraph sign.

GEM character set[7][8][3][9]
_0 _1 _2 _3 _4 _5 _6 _7 _8 _9 _A _B _C _D _E _F
0_
0
NUL
0000

21E7

21E9

21E8

21E6

25FC
🗗
1F5D7

25C6

2713
🕒
1F552
🔔
1F514

266A

25B4

25BE

25B8

25C2
1_
16

25BA

25C4

29D3

2582

00B6
§
00A7

2195

21A8

2191

2193

2192

2190

221F

2194

25B2

25BC
2_
32
SP
0020
!
0021
"
0022
#
0023
$
0024
%
0025
&
0026
'
0027
(
0028
)
0029
*
002A
+
002B
,
002C
-
002D
.
002E
/
002F
3_
48
0
0030
1
0031
2
0032
3
0033
4
0034
5
0035
6
0036
7
0037
8
0038
9
0039
:
003A
;
003B
<
003C
=
003D
>
003E
?
003F
4_
64
@
0040
A
0041
B
0042
C
0043
D
0044
E
0045
F
0046
G
0047
H
0048
I
0049
J
004A
K
004B
L
004C
M
004D
N
004E
O
004F
5_
80
P
0050
Q
0051
R
0052
S
0053
T
0054
U
0055
V
0056
W
0057
X
0058
Y
0059
Z
005A
[
005B
\
005C
]
005D
^
005E
_
005F
6_
96
`
0060
a
0061
b
0062
c
0063
d
0064
e
0065
f
0066
g
0067
h
0068
i
0069
j
006A
k
006B
l
006C
m
006D
n
006E
o
006F
7_
112
p
0070
q
0071
r
0072
s
0073
t
0074
u
0075
v
0076
w
0077
x
0078
y
0079
z
007A
{
007B
|
007C
}
007D
~
007E

2302
8_
128
Ç
00C7
ü
00FC
é
00E9
â
00E2
ä
00E4
à
00E0
å
00E5
ç
00E7
ê
00EA
ë
00EB
è
00E8
ï
00EF
î
00EE
ì
00EC
Ä
00C4
Å
00C5
9_
144
É
00C9
æ
00E6
Æ
00C6
ô
00F4
ö
00F6
ò
00F2
û
00FB
ù
00F9
ÿ
00FF
Ö
00D6
Ü
00DC
ø
00F8
£
00A3
Ø
00D8
¤
00A4
ƒ
0192
A_
160
á
00E1
í
00ED
ó
00F3
ú
00FA
ñ
00F1
Ñ
00D1
ª
00AA
º
00BA
¿
00BF

201C

201D

2039

203A
¡
00A1
«
00AB
»
00BB
B_
176
ã
00E3
õ
00F5
¥
00A5
¢
00A2
œ
0153
Œ
0152
À
00C0
Ã
00C3
Õ
00D5
§
00A7

2021

2020

00B6
©
00A9
®
00AE

2122
C_
192

201E

2026

2030

2022

2013

2014
°
00B0
Á
00C1
Â
00C2
È
00C8
Ê
00CA
Ë
00CB
Ì
00CC
Í
00CD
Î
00CE
Ï
00CF
D_
208
Ò
00D2
Ó
00D3
Ô
00D4
Š
0160
š
0161
Ù
00D9
Ú
00DA
Û
00DB
Ÿ
0178
ß
00DF

 

 

 

 

 

 
E_
224
α
03B1
β
03B2
Γ
0393
π
03C0
Σ
03A3
σ
03C3
µ
00B5
τ
03C4
Φ
03A6
Θ
0398
Ω
03A9
δ
03B4

222E
ɸ
0278

2208

2229
F_
240

2261
±
00B1

2265

2264

2320

2321
÷
00F7

2248
°
00B0

2219
·
00B7

221A

207F
²
00B2

25A0

2205
_0_1_2_3_4_5_6_7_8_9_A_B_C_D_E_F

  Letter  Number  Punctuation  Symbol  Other  Undefined  Different than code page 437

gollark: Have the /meta folder have subdirectories too.
gollark: Maybe make a /meta folder?
gollark: Also, hiding files is quite hard.
gollark: Run an SSH server on port 22 which either mucks with the SSH protocol to keep poorly programmed bots stuck forever somehow, or which just logs and ignores all commands.
gollark: Hey, that could be fun, I should try that.

See also

References

  1. Paul, Matthias R. (2001-06-10) [1995]. "Format description of DOS, OS/2, and Windows NT .CPI, and Linux .CP files" (CPI.LST file) (1.30 ed.). Archived from the original on 2016-04-20. Retrieved 2016-08-20.
  2. Elliott, John C. (2006-10-14). "CPI file format". Seasip.info. Archived from the original on 2016-09-22. Retrieved 2016-09-22.
  3. Elliott, John C. (2006-09-03). "Codepage-related software". Seasip.info. Archived from the original on 2016-11-08. Retrieved 2016-11-09.
  4. Brouwer, Andries Evert (2001-02-10). "CPI fonts". 0.2. Archived from the original on 2016-09-22. Retrieved 2016-09-22.
  5. Haralambous, Yannis (September 2007). Fonts & Encodings. Translated by Horne, P. Scott (1 ed.). Sebastopol, California, USA: O'Reilly Media, Inc. pp. 601–602, 611. ISBN 978-0-596-10242-5.
  6. MS-DOS Programmer's Reference. Microsoft Press. 1991. ISBN 1-55615-329-5.
  7. "WordPlus GEM character set". Archived from the original on 2017-01-23. Retrieved 2017-01-23.
  8. Lineback, Nathan. "GEM 3.11 Screen Shots". Toastytech.com. Archived from the original on 2019-11-18. Retrieved 2016-08-01.
  9. Elliott, John C. (2006-09-04). "Fonts for Intel GEM - System Fonts". Seasip.info. Archived from the original on 2017-02-06. Retrieved 2016-09-22.
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