On 8/13/2012 12:50 PM, Asmus Freytag wrote:
In that context, you can't distinguish a lozenge from a squished diamond (*) from a diamond suit symbol.

While the character is one a of a set, it was not uncommon to have people make do with somewhat similar characters standing in for each other. In the early years such "unifications" were, if not encouraged, then widely tolerated.

So, even if the lozenge, as such, may not have been in CP437, anyone who wanted to display one, would have used the card suit.

Sure. Just like people regularly conflated the Greek letter beta and German esszet (E1) in CP437, which was placed between lowercase alpha (E0) and uppercase gamma (E2), just to
further confuse everybody. ;-)

But I wasn't looking at the screen of a 1984 vintage IBM PC in this case -- I was looking at the IBM Corporate Specification for character sets, which identifies CP437 position 04 as SS030000 "Diamond Suit Symbol". (And at high quality laser font documentation.)

Incidentally, while people may have attempted to use CP437 04 as a lozenge instead of a card suit, in the 1980's they would have had little to no success in trying to exchange it, because the IBM PC overloaded the C0 positions in CP437 for screen display. So programs could poke 04 to the screen display to show a diamond shape, but when you tried to use that as an interchangeable character you usually ended up with garbage
instead.

--Ken

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