If you do not know of such a reference please say so. If you do have such a reference please post the link to the website.
Since I quoted specifics in my post I believe maybe you are jumping to some incorrect conclusions. For example the fact that Piccolo uses both ITA-2 Baudot and ITA-5 ASCII depending on the specific mode, the 50 and 75 baud rates, and the 20 Hz tone spacing. However, not everything is on the web, some references are actually in print, as mine tend to be. Hard to post a link to a reference manual in my library, one that is not on the web in more than review form.
The Hoka page has been suggested, and you might search for the Digital Signals FAQ, V5.3 or later, but they will only contain about the same information…and less than I passed already.
Whatever you do do not post an OFF TOPIC comment lecturing me about making a TX software for which I have no RX software.
There was not one single off-topic item in my post. Since I do not feel like retyping a full section from a book I said you might need to narrow down to exactly which versions and modes you were interested in.
My question about why you wanted to make TX software for a mode that you might not have demod software for was not a lecture, just an attempt to find out what your goals were, so I could better decide what information to pass on to you.
Since you feel I am wasting your time with my responses I will vacate myself from this thread, enjoy the search for the information you seek.
Sorry if I sound angry, but it's because I'm DESPERATE. I've been looking for YEARS for some reference sheet on the specs for these modes ALL OVER GOOGLE (the best search engine), and even GOOGLE can't find such specs sheets. Now SURELY someone at a site like RadioReference.com would know of some special (not indexed on Google) website that has specs for most existing digital modes. I just wanna know what that website is.
As I said before, not everything can be found on the web or in Google. Printed manuals and libraries are still a valid source. The more costly a reference manual is, the less likely you will find it for free.
T!