You can find charts of complete PETSCII character sets here: http://www.kreativekorp.com/software/fonts/c64.shtml
The missing characters are a handful of block elements: upper fractional blocks (Unicode only has lower), halves of MEDIUM SHADE, checkerboards and diagonals. I can put together a unified chart, with mappings to Unicode where they exist. In fact I think I'll do that. :) I'm all willing to help put together a proposal for encoding missing block element characters, but I would need other people to a) gather evidence of use in plain text and b) write up the proposal in Unicode's formal language since I've never proposed characters to Unicode before. (Additionally, I wonder if we could find evidence of the Apple II's or TRS-80's characters in use in plain text as well. Not necessarily saying those should be encoded as well, just that we should investigate.) -- Rebecca Bettencourt On Wed, Apr 5, 2017 at 12:47 PM, Murray Sargent < murr...@exchange.microsoft.com> wrote: > What PETSCII characters aren’t already in Unicode? A couple geometric > symbols? Looks mostly like a simple codepage translation. > > > > Murray > > > > *From:* Unicode [mailto:unicode-boun...@unicode.org] * On Behalf Of *Rebecca > Bettencourt > *Sent:* Wednesday, April 5, 2017 9:42 AM > *To:* Asmus Freytag <asm...@ix.netcom.com> > *Cc:* unicode <unicode@unicode.org> > *Subject:* Re: PETSCII mapping? > > > > On Wed, Apr 5, 2017 at 3:18 AM, Asmus Freytag <asm...@ix.netcom.com> > wrote: > > Unicode is not an archive of anything ever used on computers. > > > > Why not? Isn't one of Unicode's goals to support the conversion of > documents using legacy character sets into Unicode? I do not understand > why, say, the entire IBM PC character set is eligible for encoding, but not > the entire Commodore 64 character set. > > > > > > Were there word processors on the Commodore 64 that allowed the input of > PETSCII characters? Could documents written using that software demonstrate > a need to encode those characters? What about instruction manuals, magazine > articles, and program listings that used PETSCII characters in running > text? Surely there must be more than enough examples for a computer as > popular as the Commodore 64. >