type o ASCII Arranges characters according to ASCII sequence. ASCII is the default sequence and need not be specified. o EBCDIC Arranges characters according to EBCDIC sequence. The characters remain in ASCII representation; only the order is changed. o Multinational Arranges characters according to Multinational sequence, which collates the international character set. When you use the Multinational sequence, characters are ordered according to the following rules: - All diacritical (accented) forms of a character are given the collating value of the character (A', A", A` collate as A). - Lowercase characters are given the collating value of their uppercase equivalents (a collates as A, a" collates as A"). - If two strings compare as equal, tie-breaking is performed. The strings are compared to detect differences due to diacritical marks, ignored characters, or characters that collate as equal although they are actually different. If the strings still compare as equal, another comparison is done based on the numeric codes of the characters. In this final comparison, lowercase characters are ordered before uppercase. Care should be taken when sorting or merging files for further processing using the Multinational sequence. Sequence checking procedures in most programming languages compare numeric characters. Because Multinational is based on actual graphic characters and not on the codes representing those characters, normal sequence checking does not work. cs-name Arranges character keys according to the named sequence, which must be a collating sequence defined in an NCS library. High-performance Sort/Merge: The high-performance Sort/Merge utility currently supports only the ASCII, EBCDIC, and Multinational collating sequences.