You are required to choose one of them as the default, and to choose a When more than one Input Locale/Layout combination is defined, Keyboard layout in the Keyboard Control Panel on the Input Locales
In Windows it is possible to install more than one (choose the character set that is appropriate for the host or serviceĮntering Hebrew Characters on the Keyboard SET TERMINAL BYTESIZE 8 Not needed for Hebrew-7 Hebrew character-set translation is enabled during terminal emulation InĪctually attempts to load the Hebrew CP862 font into your video adapterĬonfiguring K95 for Hebrew Terminal Emulation
Window, and even then it works only if your video driver allows it. You can use this in fullscreen sessions only - NOT in an OS/2 The OS/2 version of Kermit 95 comes with a Hebrew "PC font" equivalent toĬode. You can use the bitmap (code page) fonts and instruct Kermit 95 to use your If you install an additional font thatĭoes contain Hebrew characters you can leave everything as it is. Lucida Console (fixed-pitch Unicode), but unfortunately this font does not It is recommended that you use a True Type
In Windows NT/2000/XP, we don't use code pages at all, but instead we use Likely that you have this, or can have it, unless you have installed the Have the Hebrew code page, CP862, loaded on your PC. Kermit 95 can be used to display Hebrew characters on the host if you Kermit 95's Hebrew support is widely used with Hebrew University's ALEPH This should notīe surprising, however, since very few of the terminals that KermitĮmulates support right-to-left writing direction either. Responsibility of the host application to place Hebrew characters in theĭesired position on the screen by using escape sequences. It does not mean right-to-left writing direction thus it would be the Windows encoding for Hebrew and the host encoding. VT100, VT320, ANSI, or other type of terminal, and translation between the "Hebrew terminal emulation" means the use of Hebrew characters while emulating Mainframe Kermit 4.2 or later, which translates between Latin/Hebrew and IBMĬECP 424 (the Hebrew EBCDIC Country Extended Code Page). Shares the same translation tables to ensure consistent translations) and IBM Kermit 3.13 and later and C-Kermit 5A(189) and later (with which Kermit 95 Kermit's Hebrew file transfer features can be used in conjunction with MS-DOS Thus you can use Kermit to convert a local file from, say,
TRANSLATE command, which translates a local file from one character-set toĪnother. The three Hebrew character sets are also available for use in Kermit's The file sender automatically tells the file receiver that the transfer
K-95> set xfer character-set hebrew Send using ISO Latin/Hebrew
K-95> set file character-set cp862 File is in Hebrew PC code page K-95> set file type text Make sure we are in text mode Stored in the 7-bit Hebrew character-set so it can be sent as network e-mail:Ĭ-Kermit> set file character-set hebrew-7 I want 7-bit text for email Version is coded in the Hebrew PC code page, and the UNIX version is to be Here is an example of uploading a Hebrew file from a PC to UNIX. Hebrew-7 and Latin/Hebrew, however, is not invertible because these character SET FILE CHARACTER-SET HEBREW-7 DEC 7-Bit (VT100) HebrewĪn invertible translation table between Latin/Hebrew and CP862 is used duringīoth terminal emulation and file transfer. SET FILE CHARACTER-SET CP862 Hebrew PC Code Page SET FILE CHARACTER-SET HEBREW-ISO ISO 8859-8 Latin/Hebrew Alphabet SET TRANSFER CHARACTER-SET HEBREW-ISO ISO 8859-8 Latin/Hebrew Alphabet Hebrew file transfer is fully described in Using C-Kermit. HEBREW-7 7-bit 7-Bit Hebrew from Hebrew-model DEC VT100 The Hebrew character sets known to Kermit 95 are: