SI 960

SI 960
Kermithebrew-7
Alias(es)DEC Hebrew (7-bit)
Created byDEC
StandardSI 960
Classification7-bit encoding, non-Latin adaptation of ISO 646 with naturally ordered letters
Based onASCII
Succeeded byDEC: DEC Hebrew (8-bit),
SII: SI 1311

The Israeli Standards Institute's Standard SI 960 defines a 7–bit Hebrew code page. It is derived from, but does not conform to, ISO/IEC 646; more specifically, it follows ASCII except for the lowercase letters and backtick (`), which are replaced by the naturally ordered Hebrew alphabet. It is also known as DEC Hebrew (7–bit), because DEC standardized this character set before it became an international standard.[1] Kermit named it hebrew–7 and HEBREW–7.[2][3]

The Hebrew alphabet is mapped to positions 0x60–0x7A, on top of the lowercase Latin letters (and grave accent for aleph). 7–bit Hebrew is stored in visual order.

This mapping with the high bit set, i.e. with the Hebrew letters in 0xE0–0xFA, is also reflected in ISO 8859-8.

  1. ^ Cite error: The named reference Kennelly_1991_DEC was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  2. ^ Cite error: The named reference Kermit_Charsets was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  3. ^ Cite error: The named reference Kermit_Hebrew was invoked but never defined (see the help page).