Xerox Character Code Standard
The Xerox Character Code Standard is a historical 16-bit character encoding that was created by Xerox in 1980 for the exchange of information between elements of the Xerox Network Systems Architecture. It encodes the characters required for languages using the Latin, Arabic, Hebrew, Greek and Cyrillic scripts, the Chinese, Japanese and Korean writing systems, and technical symbols.
It can be viewed as an early precursor of, and inspiration for, the Unicode Standard.
The International Character Set is compatible with XCCS.
The XCCS 2.0 revision covers Latin, Arabic, Hebrew, Gothic, Armenian, Runic, Georgian, Greek, Cyrillic, Hiragana, Katakana, Bopomofo scripts, technical, and mathematical symbols.Code charts
Character set 0x22
Character set 0x23
Character set 0x24
Character set 0x25
Character set 0x26
Character set 0x27
Character set 0x28
Character set 0x30
Character set 0x31
Character set 0xE0
Character set 0xE1
Character set 0xE2
Character set 0xE3
Character set 0xEE
Character set 0xEF
Character set 0xF0
Character set 0xF1