PEEKCH.100 is a short (1293 bytes) BASIC program which receives keyboard entry of any printable ASCII value in the M-100 character set, and produces a three-part display that analyzes the pixel makeup of that character. (Checksum=109,589). The program is a "seeing is believing" tutorial on how characters are printed on the screen, written as an aid to those who are working on applications which involve reading bytes under the cursor as reported in high RAM locations -20 to -15; e.g., screen dumps, bit mapping and the like. If you are helping a youngster learn, you'll especially like PEEKCH.100. After each character entry, the following elements appear on the LCD: (1) On the left third of the screen, the values held in locations -20 to -15 are displayed and the CHR$ value being polled is recorded. (2) At center screen, a large 6 x 8 pixel representation of the character appears. (3) At right, the binary equivalents of each of the six bytes which describe the character are presented in vertical format, duplicating the center graphic. Each byte is reproduced slowly enough in all three displays to aid comprehension. To slow the sequences even more, increase the range of the D loop in line 6 beyond 300. Happy PEEKing!