On Fri, 28 Jan 2022 13:54:38 +0000, Seymour J Metz wrote:
>
>Businesses with local customers and employees want to make things comfortable 
>and convenient for them. Some of those customers and employees may not even 
>know the Roman alphabet. Yes, if they have foreign customers then their 
>correspondence may use other scripts, but those customers would not normally 
>be dealing with local files and would not normally be concerned with their 
>names. Transliterations are often dicey at best.
>
Yes.  Kudos to ISPF 3.17.  II have created a file containing Cyrillic 
characters; tagged it as
UTF-8 (IBM-1208):
<https://www.ibm.com/docs/en/zos/2.5.0?topic=descriptions-chtag-change-file-tag-information>;
set my X3270 to IBM-880; and the characters automatically display properly.

Alas, only basefiles can be tagged, not directories.  Tagging directories should
be an RFE candidate so directory listings could be displayed properly.  My
sample directory listing, on a desktop:

789 $ ls -alR
./Hebrew:
total 8
drwxr-xr-x  3 paulgilm  wheel   96 Jan 27 08:43 .
drwxr-xr-x  5 paulgilm  wheel  160 Jan 27 13:50 ..
-rw-r--r--  1 paulgilm  wheel   29 Jan 27 08:43 שָׁלוֹם עֲלֵיכֶם
790 $ 

One potential problem: I'd expect not only the names but also the content of
the OP's files to be Hebrew.  But z/OS expects Hebrew text to be stored
backwards.  Will this cause problems?

-- 
gil

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