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Giving values in [[hexadecimal]], bytes 0x00 through 0x7F are used for single byte KS X 1003 ([[ISO 646]]:KR) characters, a similar set to ASCII but with a [[won sign]] rather than a backslash. Bytes 0x80 through 0x84 are used for IBM single byte extension characters. Lead bytes 0x8F through 0xA0 are used for IBM double byte extension characters. Lead bytes 0xA1 through 0xFE are used for Wansung code ([[KS X 1001]] characters in EUC-KR form, double byte), but with some unused space opened up for user-defined use.
Although both are sometimes named "cp949", IBM-949 is different from [[Unified Hangul Code|Windows code page 949]] (IBM-1363), which is Microsoft's Unified Hangul Code, a different extension of EUC-KR. It should also not be confused with IBM's implementation of plain EUC-KR ([[Code page 970|IBM-970]]). Code page 949 in [[OS/2]] is the IBM code page; however, a third-party patch exists to change this.<ref name="borgendale949">{{cite web |url=http://www.borgendale.com/tools/tools.htm |title=OS/2 Codepage and Keyboard Display Tools |first=Ken |last=Borgendale}}</ref>
== Terminology and encoding labelling ==
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