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Solve : symbols?

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i wanna use ms-dos symbols like symbols to make a list i found a site for it if i try echo 210   it is 210 and not a piece of a list
\please helpYou need to write your question in better English so that we can understand what you are asking.

english is hard for me i'm japanese
but how to make a list in dos, each piece got a code like 210 until 1 to 300
if i type it the code fail and it is not a list but
120 120 120 120
200               200
200               200
200               200
134 134 134 134
still don't understand. Where do these numbers come from?
Quote from: pds on December 12, 2009, 08:35:19 AM

english is hard for me i'm japanese
but how to make a list in dos, each piece got a code like 210 until 1 to 300
if i type it the code fail and it is not a list but
120 120 120 120
200               200
200               200
200               200
134 134 134 134

I'm sorry for what Salmon said, we usually deal with people who speak English normally and are just too lazy to do it properly. I think you may be using Unicode, but the numbers won't do what you want in a batch file. Try this:

copy and PASTE (or insert) the desired symbols in Microsoft Word. When you select save as, choose to save it as a plain text format. Select the MS-DOS option when prompted and select ok. Open the file in Notepad and copy and paste the desired symbols into your batch file. he wants to know how to display the ASCII CHARACTER for a given character code; as far as I'm aware there is no way of doing this easily via batch.sorry i don't understandHere in the Western WORLD we do not use Unicode.
The symbols we can make from the keyboard are from 128 to 255.
Some examples:
128 = Ç
129 = ü
130 = é
144 = É
150 = û
165 = Ñ
170 = ¬
175 =»
221 =▌
222 = ▐
245 = ⌡
245 = ÷
 These were made with the alt key and the number pad. Quote from: Geek-9pm on December 12, 2009, 10:56:06 AM
Here in the Western World we do not use Unicode.
The symbols we can make from the keyboard are from 128 to 255.
Some examples:
128 = Ç
129 = ü
130 = é
144 = É
150 = û
165 = Ñ
170 = ¬
175 =»
221 =▌
222 = ▐
245 = ⌡
245 = ÷
 These were made with the alt key and the number pad.

Actually, all versions of windows NT (NT,XP,2000,Vista,7) are based on unicode. Windows has never used ASCII either; it's always (except maybe in versions before 3.0) been the ANSI character SET. the symbols aren't QUITE the same.

the command prompt however emulates the ASCII characters. Control+B gives friendly little smiley face. Quote from: BC_Programmer on December 12, 2009, 11:41:19 AM
Actually, all versions of windows NT (NT,XP,2000,Vista,7) are based on unicode. Windows has never used ASCII either; it's always (except maybe in versions before 3.0) been the ANSI character set. the symbols aren't quite the same.

the command prompt however emulates the ASCII characters. Control+B gives friendly little smiley face.

thanks this where i'm searching for little question if i press ctrl+a or c is that a dos symbol too?ok thanks by the way this is the program i use it is very hard on me, to understandhttp://www.petesqbsite.com/selections/express/issue21/freepascal.png Quote from: pds on December 13, 2009, 04:31:01 AM
ok thanks by the way this is the program i use it is very hard on me, to understandhttp://www.petesqbsite.com/selections/express/issue21/freepascal.png

hey pds you're japanese too and your link is't active :/


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