ECMA-23

ECMA-23 is a standard for a bit-paired keyboard layout adopted in 1969 and revised in 1975. As a bit-paired layout, shifted keys correspond to toggling bits in the ASCII keycode. This is most visible in the digits on the top row, where shifting 6789 give &'(), and ;+, :* and -= are paired.

RS2376 parallel ASCII keyboard with ECMA23/ISO layout.
Acorn BBC Microcomputer with ECMA23/ANSI layout, @ is a singleton key and Shift-underline generates £ as character 96.
Modern Dell keyboard customised with EMCA23/ISO layout.

The ECMA-23 layout has two options, being the same as the ISO 2530 or the ANSI-X4.14 bit-paired layout.

In the UK, EMCA-23 layout keyboards were used on most 8-bit computers such as the Acorn BBC computers and the earlier Atom and Systems, the Amstrad CPC series, and (to an extent) the ZX Spectrum. While bit-paired layouts have generally given way to typewriter layouts it remains as the Japanese keyboard layout.

Technical details

  • The _ and \| keys may be at the left as per ISO2530 or at the right as per ANSI-X4.14.
  • Character 96 is generated either with Shift-_ with @ a singleton key, or with Shift-@ with _ a singleton key.
  • Underline may be generated with Shifted-0 instead of with its own key. If this is done then Shift-@ is used to generate character 96.
  • If a key is labelled ← Backspace it should be at the top-right; if a key is labelled DELETE it should be at the bottom-right.
  • If the key to the left of 1 is not _, it is ESCAPE.

The most common layouts are:

  • "BBC Micro": ECMA23/ANSI with Shift-_ generating character 96
  • "Japan": ECMA23/ANSI with Shift-@ generating character 96 and an extra key to the right of /? generating \_
  • "PC": ECMA23/ISO with Shift-_ generating character 96

Examples

Acorn Atom and Acorn System [1] EMCA23/ANSI : ^ \ [ ] shuffled
RS2376 keyboard[2] EMCA23/ISO character 96 generated with Shift-@
BBC Microcomputer series [3] EMCA23/ANSI character 96 as £ generated with Shift-_
Amstrad CPC [4] EMCA23/ANSI :* and ;+ swapped, \ moved, Shift-\ and Shift-@ swapped,
DELETE in the ← Backspace location

Notes

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