The Unicode Standard assigns various properties to each Unicode character and code point.[1][2]
The properties can be used to handle characters (code points) in processes, like in line-breaking, script direction right-to-left or applying controls. Some "character properties" are also defined for code points that have no character assigned and code points that are labeled like "<not a character>". The character properties are described in Standard Annex #44.[2]
Properties have levels of forcefulness: normative, informative, contributory, or provisional. For simplicity of specification, a character property can be assigned by specifying a continuous range of code points that have the same property.[3]
Semantic elements
Properties are displayed [4] in the following order:
[code];[name];[gc];[cc];[bc];[decomposition];;;[nv];[bm];[alias];;;;
- 'alias' = corrected name
- 'bc' = bidi (bidirectional) category [L, R etc]
- 'bm' = bidi mirrored [N or Y]
- 'cc' = combining class [position of diacritic]
- decomposition = letter + diacritic, ligature X Y, superscript X, font X, initial X, medial X, final X, isolated X, vertical X, etc.
- 'gc' = general category [letter, symbol, digit, punctuation, case behavior, etc.]
- 'nv' = numeric value [of a digit]
Name
A Unicode character is assigned a unique Name (na).[1] The name is composed of uppercase letters A–Z, digits 0–9, hyphen-minus (-) and space ( ). Some sequences are excluded: names beginning with a space or hyphen, names ending with a space or hyphen, repeated spaces or hyphens, and space after hyphen are not allowed. The name is guaranteed to be unique within Unicode, and can be used to identify a code point and its character. Ideographic characters, of which there are tens of thousands, are named in the pattern "cjk unified ideograph-hhhh". For example, U+4E00 一 CJK UNIFIED IDEOGRAPH-4E00. Formatting characters are named too: U+00A0 NO-BREAK SPACE.
The following classes of code point do not have a Name (na=""): Controls (General Category: Cc), Private use (Co), Surrogate (Cs), Non-characters (Cn) and Reserved (Cn). They may be referenced, informally, by a generic or specific meta-name, called "Code Point Labels": <control>, <control-0088>, <reserved>, <noncharacter-hhhh>, <private-use-hhhh>, or <surrogate>. Since these labels contain <>-brackets, they can never appear as a Name, which prevents confusion.
Version 1.0 names
In version 2.0 of Unicode, many names were changed. From then on the rule "a name will never change" came into effect, including the strict (normative) use of alias names. Disused version 1.0-names were moved to the property Alias, to provide some backward compatibility.
Character name alias
Starting from Unicode version 2.0, the published name for a code point will never change. Therefore, in the event of a character name being misspelled or if the character name is completely wrong or seriously misleading, a formal Character Name Alias may be assigned to the character, and this alias may be used by applications instead of the actual defective character name.[1] For example, U+FE18 ︘ PRESENTATION FORM FOR VERTICAL RIGHT WHITE LENTICULAR BRAKCET has the character name alias "PRESENTATION FORM FOR VERTICAL RIGHT WHITE LENTICULAR BRACKET" in order to mitigate the misspelling of "bracket" as "brakcet" in the actual character name; U+A015 ꀕ YI SYLLABLE WU has the character name alias "YI SYLLABLE ITERATION MARK" because contrary to the character name it does not have a fixed syllabic value.
In addition to character name aliases which are corrections to defective character names, some characters are assigned aliases which are alternative names or abbreviations. Five types of character name aliases are defined in the Unicode Standard:
- Correction: corrections for misspelled or seriously incorrect character names;
- Control: ISO 6429 names for C0 and C1 control functions (which are not assigned character names in the Unicode Standard);
- Alternate: alternative names for some format characters (only U+FEFF "ZERO WIDTH NO-BREAK SPACE" which has the alias "BYTE ORDER MARK");
- Figment: Documented labels for some C1 control code functions which are not actual names in any standard;
- Abbreviation: Abbreviations or acronyms for control codes, format characters, spaces, and variation selectors.
All formal character name aliases follow the rules for permissible character names, and are guaranteed to be unique within both the character name alias and the character name namespaces (for this reason, the ISO 6429 name "BELL" is not defined as an alias for U+0007 because U+1F514 is named "BELL").[1]
As of Unicode version 12.1, twenty-eight formal character name aliases are defined as corrections for defective character names.[5] These are listed below.
Apart from these normative names, informal names may be shown in the Unicode code charts. These are other commonly used names for a character, and do not have the same character restriction. These informal names are not guaranteed to be unique, and may be changed or removed in later versions of the standard.
General Category
Each code point is assigned a value for General Category. This is one of the character properties that are also defined for unassigned code points and code points that are defined "not a character".
General Category (Unicode Character Property)[lower-alpha 1] | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Value | Category Major, minor | Basic type[lower-alpha 2] | Character assigned[lower-alpha 2] | Count[lower-alpha 3] (as of 15.1) | Remarks |
L, Letter; LC, Cased Letter (Lu, Ll, and Lt only)[lower-alpha 4] | |||||
Lu | Letter, uppercase | Graphic | Character | 1,831 | |
Ll | Letter, lowercase | Graphic | Character | 2,233 | |
Lt | Letter, titlecase | Graphic | Character | 31 | Ligatures or digraphs containing an uppercase followed by a lowercase part (e.g., Dž, Lj, Nj, and Dz) |
Lm | Letter, modifier | Graphic | Character | 397 | A modifier letter |
Lo | Letter, other | Graphic | Character | 132,234 | An ideograph or a letter in a unicase alphabet |
M, Mark | |||||
Mn | Mark, nonspacing | Graphic | Character | 1,985 | |
Mc | Mark, spacing combining | Graphic | Character | 452 | |
Me | Mark, enclosing | Graphic | Character | 13 | |
N, Number | |||||
Nd | Number, decimal digit | Graphic | Character | 680 | All these, and only these, have Numeric Type = De[lower-alpha 5] |
Nl | Number, letter | Graphic | Character | 236 | Numerals composed of letters or letterlike symbols (e.g., Roman numerals) |
No | Number, other | Graphic | Character | 915 | E.g., vulgar fractions, superscript and subscript digits |
P, Punctuation | |||||
Pc | Punctuation, connector | Graphic | Character | 10 | Includes spacing underscore characters such as "_", and other spacing tie characters. Unlike other punctuation characters, these may be classified as "word" characters by regular expression libraries.[lower-alpha 6] |
Pd | Punctuation, dash | Graphic | Character | 26 | Includes several hyphen characters |
Ps | Punctuation, open | Graphic | Character | 79 | Opening bracket characters |
Pe | Punctuation, close | Graphic | Character | 77 | Closing bracket characters |
Pi | Punctuation, initial quote | Graphic | Character | 12 | Opening quotation mark. Does not include the ASCII "neutral" quotation mark. May behave like Ps or Pe depending on usage |
Pf | Punctuation, final quote | Graphic | Character | 10 | Closing quotation mark. May behave like Ps or Pe depending on usage |
Po | Punctuation, other | Graphic | Character | 628 | |
S, Symbol | |||||
Sm | Symbol, math | Graphic | Character | 948 | Mathematical symbols (e.g., +, −, =, ×, ÷, √, ∊, ≠). Does not include parentheses and brackets, which are in categories Ps and Pe. Also does not include !, *, -, or /, which despite frequent use as mathematical operators, are primarily considered to be "punctuation". |
Sc | Symbol, currency | Graphic | Character | 63 | Currency symbols |
Sk | Symbol, modifier | Graphic | Character | 125 | |
So | Symbol, other | Graphic | Character | 6,639 | |
Z, Separator | |||||
Zs | Separator, space | Graphic | Character | 17 | Includes the space, but not TAB, CR, or LF, which are Cc |
Zl | Separator, line | Format | Character | 1 | Only U+2028 LINE SEPARATOR (LSEP) |
Zp | Separator, paragraph | Format | Character | 1 | Only U+2029 PARAGRAPH SEPARATOR (PSEP) |
C, Other | |||||
Cc | Other, control | Control | Character | 65 (will never change)[lower-alpha 5] | No name,[lower-alpha 7] <control> |
Cf | Other, format | Format | Character | 170 | Includes the soft hyphen, joining control characters (ZWNJ and ZWJ), control characters to support bidirectional text, and language tag characters |
Cs | Other, surrogate | Surrogate | Not (only used in UTF-16) | 2,048 (will never change)[lower-alpha 5] | No name,[lower-alpha 7] <surrogate> |
Co | Other, private use | Private-use | Character (but no interpretation specified) | 137,468 total (will never change)[lower-alpha 5] (6,400 in BMP, 131,068 in Planes 15–16) | No name,[lower-alpha 7] <private-use> |
Cn | Other, not assigned | Noncharacter | Not | 66 (will not change unless the range of Unicode code points is expanded)[lower-alpha 5] | No name,[lower-alpha 7] <noncharacter> |
Reserved | Not | 824,652 | No name,[lower-alpha 7] <reserved> | ||
|
Punctuation
Characters have separate properties to denote they are a punctuation character. The properties all have a Yes/No values: Dash, Quotation_Mark, Sentence_Terminal, Terminal_Punctuation.
Whitespace
Whitespace is a commonly used concept for a typographic effect. Basically it covers invisible characters that have a spacing effect in rendered text. It includes spaces, tabs, and new line formatting controls. In Unicode, such a character has the property set "WSpace=yes". In version 15.1, there are 25 whitespace characters.
Name | Code point | Width box | May break? | In IDN? |
Script | Block | General category |
Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
character tabulation | U+0009 | 9 | Yes | No | Common | Basic Latin | Other, control |
HT, Horizontal Tab. HTML/XML named entity: 	 , LaTeX: \tab , C escape: \t | |
line feed | U+000A | 10 | Is a line-break | Common | Basic Latin | Other, control |
LF, Line feed. HTML/XML named entity: 
 , C escape: \n | ||
line tabulation | U+000B | 11 | Is a line-break | Common | Basic Latin | Other, control |
VT, Vertical Tab. C escape: \v | ||
form feed | U+000C | 12 | Is a line-break | Common | Basic Latin | Other, control |
FF, Form feed. C escape: \f | ||
carriage return | U+000D | 13 | Is a line-break | Common | Basic Latin | Other, control |
CR, Carriage return. C escape: \r | ||
space | U+0020 | 32 | Yes | No | Common | Basic Latin | Separator, space |
Most common (normal ASCII space). LaTeX: \ | |
next line | U+0085 | 133 | Is a line-break | Common | Latin-1 Supplement | Other, control |
NEL, Next line. LaTeX: \\ | ||
no-break space | U+00A0 | 160 | No | No | Common | Latin-1 Supplement | Separator, space |
Non-breaking space: identical to U+0020, but not a point at which a line may be broken. HTML/XML named entity: ,   LaTeX: ~ | |
ogham space mark | U+1680 | 5760 | Yes | No | Ogham | Ogham | Separator, space |
Used for interword separation in Ogham text. Normally a vertical line in vertical text or a horizontal line in horizontal text, but may also be a blank space in "stemless" fonts. Requires an Ogham font. | |
en quad | U+2000 | 8192 | Yes | No | Common | General Punctuation | Separator, space |
Width of one en. U+2002 is canonically equivalent to this character; U+2002 is preferred. | |
em quad | U+2001 | 8193 | Yes | No | Common | General Punctuation | Separator, space |
Also known as "mutton quad". Width of one em. U+2003 is canonically equivalent to this character; U+2003 is preferred. | |
en space | U+2002 | 8194 | Yes | No | Common | General Punctuation | Separator, space |
Also known as "nut". Width of one en. U+2000 En Quad is canonically equivalent to this character; U+2002 is preferred. HTML/XML named entity:   , LaTeX: \enspace (the LaTeX en space is a no-break space) | |
em space | U+2003 | 8195 | Yes | No | Common | General Punctuation | Separator, space |
Also known as "mutton". Width of one em. U+2001 Em Quad is canonically equivalent to this character; U+2003 is preferred. HTML/XML named entity:   , LaTeX: \quad | |
three-per-em space | U+2004 | 8196 | Yes | No | Common | General Punctuation | Separator, space |
Also known as "thick space". One third of an em wide. HTML/XML named entity:   , LaTeX: \; (the LaTeX thick space is a no-break space) | |
four-per-em space | U+2005 | 8197 | Yes | No | Common | General Punctuation | Separator, space |
Also known as "mid space". One fourth of an em wide. HTML/XML named entity:   | |
six-per-em space | U+2006 | 8198 | Yes | No | Common | General Punctuation | Separator, space |
One sixth of an em wide. In computer typography, sometimes equated to U+2009. | |
figure space | U+2007 | 8199 | No | No | Common | General Punctuation | Separator, space |
Figure space. In fonts with monospaced digits, equal to the width of one digit. HTML/XML named entity:   | |
punctuation space | U+2008 | 8200 | Yes | No | Common | General Punctuation | Separator, space |
As wide as the narrow punctuation in a font, i.e. the advance width of the period or comma.[6] HTML/XML named entity:   | |
thin space | U+2009 | 8201 | Yes | No | Common | General Punctuation | Separator, space |
Thin space; one-fifth (sometimes one-sixth) of an em wide. Recommended for use as a thousands separator for measures made with SI units. Unlike U+2002 to U+2008, its width may get adjusted in typesetting.[7] HTML/XML named entity:   ,   , LaTeX: \, (the LaTeX thin space is a no-break space) | |
hair space | U+200A | 8202 | Yes | No | Common | General Punctuation | Separator, space |
Thinner than a thin space. HTML/XML named entity:     (does not work in all browsers) | |
line separator | U+2028 | 8232 | Is a line-break | Common | General Punctuation | Separator, line |
|||
paragraph separator | U+2029 | 8233 | Is a line-break | Common | General Punctuation | Separator, paragraph |
|||
narrow no-break space | U+202F | 8239 | No | No | Common | General Punctuation | Separator, space |
Narrow no-break space. Similar in function to U+00A0 No-Break Space. When used with Mongolian, its width is usually one third of the normal space; in other context, its width sometimes resembles that of the Thin Space (U+2009). LaTeX: \, | |
medium mathematical space | U+205F | 8287 | Yes | No | Common | General Punctuation | Separator, space |
MMSP. Used in mathematical formulae. Four-eighteenths of an em.[8] In mathematical typography, the widths of spaces are usually given in integral multiples of an eighteenth of an em, and 4/18 em may be used in several situations, for example between the a and the + and between the + and the b in the expression a + b.[9] HTML/XML named entity:   , LaTeX: \: (the LaTeX medium space is a no-break space) | |
ideographic space | U+3000 | 12288 | Yes | No | Common | CJK Symbols and Punctuation | Separator, space |
As wide as a CJK character cell (fullwidth). Used, for example, in tai tou. |
Name | Code point | Width box | May break? | In IDN? |
Script | Block | General category |
Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
mongolian vowel separator | U+180E | 6158 | | Yes | No | Mongolian | Mongolian | Other, Format |
MVS. A narrow space character, used in Mongolian to cause the final two characters of a word to take on different shapes.[10] It is no longer classified as space character (i.e. in Zs category) in Unicode 6.3.0, even though it was in previous versions of the standard. |
zero width space | U+200B | 8203 | | Yes | No | ? | General Punctuation | Other, Format |
ZWSP, zero-width space. Used to indicate word boundaries to text processing systems when using scripts that do not use explicit spacing. It is similar to the soft hyphen, with the difference that the latter is used to indicate syllable boundaries, and should display a visible hyphen when the line breaks at it. HTML/XML named entity: ​ [11][lower-alpha 3] |
zero width non-joiner | U+200C | 8204 | | Yes | Context-dependent[16] | ? | General Punctuation | Other, Format |
ZWNJ, zero-width non-joiner. When placed between two characters that would otherwise be connected, a ZWNJ causes them to be printed in their final and initial forms, respectively. HTML/XML named entity: ‌ |
zero width joiner | U+200D | 8205 | | Yes | Context-dependent[17] | ? | General Punctuation | Other, Format |
ZWJ, zero-width joiner. When placed between two characters that would otherwise not be connected, a ZWJ causes them to be printed in their connected forms. Can also be used to display joining forms in isolation. Depending on whether a ligature or conjunct is expected by default, can either induce (as in emoji and in Sinhala) or suppress (as in Devanagari) substitution with a single glyph, whilst still permitting use of individual joining forms (unlike ZWNJ). HTML/XML named entity: ‍ |
word joiner | U+2060 | 8288 | | No | No | ? | General Punctuation | Other, Format |
WJ, word joiner. Similar to U+200B, but not a point at which a line may be broken. HTML/XML named entity: ⁠ |
zero width non-breaking space | U+FEFF | 65279 | | No | No | ? | Arabic Presentation Forms-B | Other, Format |
Zero-width non-breaking space. Used primarily as a Byte Order Mark. Use as an indication of non-breaking is deprecated as of Unicode 3.2; see U+2060 instead. |
|
Other general characteristics
Ideographic, alphabetic, noncharacter.
Combining class
Some common codes:
- 0 = spacing letter, symbol or modifier (e.g. a, (, ʰ)
- 1 = overlay
- 6 = Han reading (CJK diacritic reading marks)
- 7 = nukta (diacritic nukta in Brahmic scripts)
- 8 = kana voicing marks
- 9 = virama
10–199 = various fixed-position classes
Marks which attach to the base letter:
- 200 = attached at bottom left
- 202 = attached directly below (e.g. cedilla on ç)
- 204 = attached at bottom right
- 208 = attached to left
- 210 = attached to right
- 212 = attached to top left
- 214 = attached directly above
- 216 = attached at top right
Marks which do not attach to the base letter:
- 218 = bottom left
- 220 = directly below (e.g. ring on n̥)
- 222 = below right
- 224 = left
- 226 = right
- 228 = above left
- 230 = above (e.g. acute accent on á)
- 232 = above right
- 233 = double below (subtends two bases)
- 234 = double above (extends two bases)
- 240 = iota subscript (only that Greek diacritic)
Display-related properties
Shaping, width.
Bidirectional writing
Six character properties pertain to bi-directional writing: Bidi_Class, Bidi_Control, Bidi_Mirrored, Bidi_Mirroring_Glyph, Bidi_Paired_Bracket and Bidi_Paired_Bracket_Type.
One of Unicode's major features is support of bi-directional (Bidi) text display right-to-left (R-to-L) and left-to-right (L-to-R). The Unicode Bidirectional Algorithm UAX9[18] describes the process of presenting text with altering script directions. For example, it enables a Hebrew quote in an English text. The Bidi_Character_Type marks a character's behaviour in directional writing. To override a direction, Unicode has defined special formatting control characters (Bidi-Controls). These characters can enforce a direction, and by definition only affect bi-directional writing.
Each code point has a property called Bidi_Class. It defines its behaviour in a bidirectional text as interpreted by the algorithm:
Type[2] | Description | Strength | Directionality | General scope | Bidi_Control character[3] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
L | Left-to-Right | Strong | L-to-R | Most alphabetic and syllabic characters, Chinese characters, non-European or non-Arabic digits, LRM character, ... | U+200E LEFT-TO-RIGHT MARK (LRM) |
R | Right-to-Left | Strong | R-to-L | Adlam, Hebrew, Mandaic, Mende Kikakui, N'Ko, Samaritan, ancient scripts like Kharoshthi and Nabataean, RLM character, ... | U+200F RIGHT-TO-LEFT MARK (RLM) |
AL | Arabic Letter | Strong | R-to-L | Arabic, Hanifi Rohingya, Sogdian, Syriac, and Thaana alphabets, and most punctuation specific to those scripts, ALM character, ... | U+061C ARABIC LETTER MARK (ALM) |
EN | European Number | Weak | European digits, Eastern Arabic-Indic digits, Coptic epact numbers, ... | ||
ES | European Separator | Weak | plus sign, minus sign, ... | ||
ET | European Number Terminator | Weak | degree sign, currency symbols, ... | ||
AN | Arabic Number | Weak | Arabic-Indic digits, Arabic decimal and thousands separators, Rumi digits, Hanifi Rohingya digits, ... | ||
CS | Common Number Separator | Weak | colon, comma, full stop, no-break space, ... | ||
NSM | Nonspacing Mark | Weak | Characters in General Categories Mark, nonspacing, and Mark, enclosing (Mn, Me) | ||
BN | Boundary Neutral | Weak | Default ignorables, non-characters, control characters other than those explicitly given other types | ||
B | Paragraph Separator | Neutral | paragraph separator, appropriate Newline Functions, higher-level protocol paragraph determination | ||
S | Segment Separator | Neutral | Tabs | ||
WS | Whitespace | Neutral | space, figure space, line separator, form feed, General Punctuation block spaces (smaller set than the Unicode whitespace list) | ||
ON | Other Neutrals | Neutral | All other characters, including object replacement character | ||
LRE | Left-to-Right Embedding | Explicit | L-to-R | LRE character only | U+202A LEFT-TO-RIGHT EMBEDDING (LRE) |
LRO | Left-to-Right Override | Explicit | L-to-R | LRO character only | U+202D LEFT-TO-RIGHT OVERRIDE (LRO) |
RLE | Right-to-Left Embedding | Explicit | R-to-L | RLE character only | U+202B RIGHT-TO-LEFT EMBEDDING (RLE) |
RLO | Right-to-Left Override | Explicit | R-to-L | RLO character only | U+202E RIGHT-TO-LEFT OVERRIDE (RLO) |
Pop Directional Format | Explicit | PDF character only | U+202C POP DIRECTIONAL FORMATTING (PDF) | ||
LRI | Left-to-Right Isolate | Explicit | L-to-R | LRI character only | U+2066 LEFT-TO-RIGHT ISOLATE (LRI) |
RLI | Right-to-Left Isolate | Explicit | R-to-L | RLI character only | U+2067 RIGHT-TO-LEFT ISOLATE (RLI) |
FSI | First Strong Isolate | Explicit | FSI character only | U+2068 FIRST STRONG ISOLATE (FSI) | |
PDI | Pop Directional Isolate | Explicit | PDI character only | U+2069 POP DIRECTIONAL ISOLATE (PDI) | |
Notes
|
In normal situations, the algorithm can determine the direction of a text by this character property. To control more complex Bidi situations, e.g. when an English text has a Hebrew quote, extra options are added to Unicode. Twelve characters have the property Bidi_Control=Yes: ALM, FSI, LRE, LRI, LRM, LRO, PDF, PDI, RLE, RLI, RLM and RLO as named in the table. These are invisible formatting control characters, only used by the algorithm and with no effect outside of bidirectional formatting.[18] Despite the name, they are formatting characters, not control characters, and have General category "Other, format (Cf)" in the Unicode definition.
Basically, the algorithm determines a sequence of characters with the same strong direction type (R-to-L or L-to-R), taking in account an overruling by the special Bidi-controls. Number strings (Weak types) are assigned a direction according to their strong environment, as are Neutral characters. Finally, the characters are displayed per a string's direction.
Two character properties are relevant to determining a mirror image of a glyph in bidirectional text: Bidi_Mirrored=Yes indicates that the glyph should be mirrored when written R-to-L. The property Bidi_Mirroring_Glyph=U+hhhh can then point to the mirrored character. For example, brackets "()" are mirrored this way. Shaping cursive scripts such as Arabic, and mirroring glyphs that have a direction, is not part of the algorithm.
Casing
The Case value is Normative in Unicode. It pertains to those scripts with uppercase (aka capital, majuscule) and the lowercase (aka small, minuscule) letters. Case-difference occurs in Adlam, Armenian, Cherokee, Coptic, Cyrillic, Deseret, Glagolitic, Greek, Khutsuri and Mkhedruli Georgian, Latin, Medefaidrin, Old Hungarian, Osage, Vithkuqi and Warang Citi scripts.
(upper, lower, title, folding—both simple and full)
Numeric values and types
Decimal
Characters are classified with a Numeric type.[1] Characters such as fractions, subscripts, superscripts, Roman numerals, currency numerators, encircled numbers, and script-specific digits are type Numeric. They have a numeric value that can be decimal, including zero and negatives, or a vulgar fraction. If there is not such a value, as with most of the characters, the numeric type is "None".
The characters that do have a numeric value are separated in three groups: Decimal (De), Digit (Di) and Numeric (Nu, i.e. all other). "Decimal" means the character is a straight decimal digit. Only characters that are part of a contiguous encoded range 0..9 have numeric type Decimal. Other digits, like superscripts, have numeric type Digit. All numeric characters like fractions and Roman numerals end up with the type "Numeric". The intended effect is that a simple parser can use these decimal numeric values, without being distracted by say a numeric superscript or a fraction. Eighty-three CJK Ideographs that represent a number, including those used for accounting, are typed Numeric.
On the other hand, characters that could have a numeric value as a second meaning are still marked Numeric type "None", and have no numeric value (""). E.g. Latin letters can be used in paragraph numbering like "II.A.1.b", but the letters "I", "A" and "b" are not numeric (type "None") and have no numeric value.
Numeric Type[a][b] (Unicode character property) | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Numeric type | Code | Has numeric value | Example | Remarks |
Not numeric | <none> | No |
|
Numeric Value="NaN" |
Decimal | De | Yes |
|
Straight digit (decimal-radix). Corresponds both ways with General Category=Nd[a] |
Digit | Di | Yes |
| Decimal, but in typographic context |
Numeric | Nu | Yes |
| Numeric value, but not decimal-radix |
a. ^ "Section 4.6: Numeric Value" (PDF). The Unicode Standard. Unicode Consortium. September 2022. | ||||
b. ^ "Unicode 15.1 Derived Numeric Types". Unicode Character Database. Unicode Consortium. 2023-01-05. |
Hexadecimal digits
Hexadecimal characters are those in the series with hexadecimal values 0...9ABCDEF (sixteen characters, decimal value 0–15). The character property Hex_Digit is set to Yes when a character is in such a series:
Characters in Unicode marked Hex_Digit=Yes [a] | |||
---|---|---|---|
0123456789ABCDEF | Basic Latin, capitals | Also ASCII_Hex_Digit=Yes | |
0123456789abcdef | Basic Latin, small letters | Also ASCII_Hex_Digit=Yes | |
0123456789ABCDEF | Fullwidth forms, capitals | ||
0123456789abcdef | Fullwidth forms, small letters | ||
a. ^ "Unicode 15.1 UCD: PropList.txt". 2023-08-01. Retrieved 2023-09-12. |
Forty-four characters are marked as Hex_Digit. The ones in the Basic Latin block are also marked as ASCII_Hex_Digit.
Unicode has no separate characters for hexadecimal values. A consequence is, that when using regular characters it is not possible to determine whether hexadecimal value is intended, or even whether a value is intended at all. That should be determined at a higher level, e.g. by prepending "0x" to a hexadecimal number or by context. The only feature is that Unicode can note that a sequence can or can not be a hexadecimal value.
Block
A block is a uniquely named, contiguous range of code points. It is identified by its first and last code point. Blocks do not overlap. A block may contain code points that are reserved, not-assigned, etc. Each character that is assigned, has a single "block name" value from the 328 names assigned as of Unicode version 15.1. Unassigned code points outside of an existing block have the default value "No_block".
Plane | Block range | Block name | Code points[lower-alpha 1] | Assigned characters | Scripts[lower-alpha 2][lower-alpha 3][lower-alpha 4][lower-alpha 5][lower-alpha 6] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
0 BMP | U+0000..U+007F | Basic Latin[lower-alpha 7] | 128 | 128 | Latin (52 characters), Common (76 characters) |
0 BMP | U+0080..U+00FF | Latin-1 Supplement[lower-alpha 8] | 128 | 128 | Latin (64 characters), Common (64 characters) |
0 BMP | U+0100..U+017F | Latin Extended-A | 128 | 128 | Latin |
0 BMP | U+0180..U+024F | Latin Extended-B | 208 | 208 | Latin |
0 BMP | U+0250..U+02AF | IPA Extensions | 96 | 96 | Latin |
0 BMP | U+02B0..U+02FF | Spacing Modifier Letters | 80 | 80 | Bopomofo (2 characters), Latin (14 characters), Common (64 characters) |
0 BMP | U+0300..U+036F | Combining Diacritical Marks | 112 | 112 | Inherited |
0 BMP | U+0370..U+03FF | Greek and Coptic | 144 | 135 | Coptic (14 characters), Greek (117 characters), Common (4 characters) |
0 BMP | U+0400..U+04FF | Cyrillic | 256 | 256 | Cyrillic (254 characters), Inherited (2 characters) |
0 BMP | U+0500..U+052F | Cyrillic Supplement | 48 | 48 | Cyrillic |
0 BMP | U+0530..U+058F | Armenian | 96 | 91 | Armenian |
0 BMP | U+0590..U+05FF | Hebrew | 112 | 88 | Hebrew |
0 BMP | U+0600..U+06FF | Arabic | 256 | 256 | Arabic (238 characters), Common (6 characters), Inherited (12 characters) |
0 BMP | U+0700..U+074F | Syriac | 80 | 77 | Syriac |
0 BMP | U+0750..U+077F | Arabic Supplement | 48 | 48 | Arabic |
0 BMP | U+0780..U+07BF | Thaana | 64 | 50 | Thaana |
0 BMP | U+07C0..U+07FF | NKo | 64 | 62 | N’Ko |
0 BMP | U+0800..U+083F | Samaritan | 64 | 61 | Samaritan |
0 BMP | U+0840..U+085F | Mandaic | 32 | 29 | Mandaic |
0 BMP | U+0860..U+086F | Syriac Supplement | 16 | 11 | Syriac |
0 BMP | U+0870..U+089F | Arabic Extended-B | 48 | 41 | Arabic |
0 BMP | U+08A0..U+08FF | Arabic Extended-A | 96 | 96 | Arabic (95 characters), Common (1 character) |
0 BMP | U+0900..U+097F | Devanagari | 128 | 128 | Devanagari (122 characters), Common (2 characters), Inherited (4 characters) |
0 BMP | U+0980..U+09FF | Bengali | 128 | 96 | Bengali |
0 BMP | U+0A00..U+0A7F | Gurmukhi | 128 | 80 | Gurmukhi |
0 BMP | U+0A80..U+0AFF | Gujarati | 128 | 91 | Gujarati |
0 BMP | U+0B00..U+0B7F | Oriya | 128 | 91 | Oriya |
0 BMP | U+0B80..U+0BFF | Tamil | 128 | 72 | Tamil |
0 BMP | U+0C00..U+0C7F | Telugu | 128 | 100 | Telugu |
0 BMP | U+0C80..U+0CFF | Kannada | 128 | 91 | Kannada |
0 BMP | U+0D00..U+0D7F | Malayalam | 128 | 118 | Malayalam |
0 BMP | U+0D80..U+0DFF | Sinhala | 128 | 91 | Sinhala |
0 BMP | U+0E00..U+0E7F | Thai | 128 | 87 | Thai (86 characters), Common (1 character) |
0 BMP | U+0E80..U+0EFF | Lao | 128 | 83 | Lao |
0 BMP | U+0F00..U+0FFF | Tibetan | 256 | 211 | Tibetan (207 characters), Common (4 characters) |
0 BMP | U+1000..U+109F | Myanmar | 160 | 160 | Myanmar |
0 BMP | U+10A0..U+10FF | Georgian | 96 | 88 | Georgian (87 characters), Common (1 character) |
0 BMP | U+1100..U+11FF | Hangul Jamo | 256 | 256 | Hangul |
0 BMP | U+1200..U+137F | Ethiopic | 384 | 358 | Ethiopic |
0 BMP | U+1380..U+139F | Ethiopic Supplement | 32 | 26 | Ethiopic |
0 BMP | U+13A0..U+13FF | Cherokee | 96 | 92 | Cherokee |
0 BMP | U+1400..U+167F | Unified Canadian Aboriginal Syllabics | 640 | 640 | Canadian Aboriginal |
0 BMP | U+1680..U+169F | Ogham | 32 | 29 | Ogham |
0 BMP | U+16A0..U+16FF | Runic | 96 | 89 | Runic (86 characters), Common (3 characters) |
0 BMP | U+1700..U+171F | Tagalog | 32 | 23 | Tagalog |
0 BMP | U+1720..U+173F | Hanunoo | 32 | 23 | Hanunoo (21 characters), Common (2 characters) |
0 BMP | U+1740..U+175F | Buhid | 32 | 20 | Buhid |
0 BMP | U+1760..U+177F | Tagbanwa | 32 | 18 | Tagbanwa |
0 BMP | U+1780..U+17FF | Khmer | 128 | 114 | Khmer |
0 BMP | U+1800..U+18AF | Mongolian | 176 | 158 | Mongolian (155 characters), Common (3 characters) |
0 BMP | U+18B0..U+18FF | Unified Canadian Aboriginal Syllabics Extended | 80 | 70 | Canadian Aboriginal |
0 BMP | U+1900..U+194F | Limbu | 80 | 68 | Limbu |
0 BMP | U+1950..U+197F | Tai Le | 48 | 35 | Tai Le |
0 BMP | U+1980..U+19DF | New Tai Lue | 96 | 83 | New Tai Lue |
0 BMP | U+19E0..U+19FF | Khmer Symbols | 32 | 32 | Khmer |
0 BMP | U+1A00..U+1A1F | Buginese | 32 | 30 | Buginese |
0 BMP | U+1A20..U+1AAF | Tai Tham | 144 | 127 | Tai Tham |
0 BMP | U+1AB0..U+1AFF | Combining Diacritical Marks Extended | 80 | 31 | Inherited |
0 BMP | U+1B00..U+1B7F | Balinese | 128 | 124 | Balinese |
0 BMP | U+1B80..U+1BBF | Sundanese | 64 | 64 | Sundanese |
0 BMP | U+1BC0..U+1BFF | Batak | 64 | 56 | Batak |
0 BMP | U+1C00..U+1C4F | Lepcha | 80 | 74 | Lepcha |
0 BMP | U+1C50..U+1C7F | Ol Chiki | 48 | 48 | Ol Chiki |
0 BMP | U+1C80..U+1C8F | Cyrillic Extended-C | 16 | 9 | Cyrillic |
0 BMP | U+1C90..U+1CBF | Georgian Extended | 48 | 46 | Georgian |
0 BMP | U+1CC0..U+1CCF | Sundanese Supplement | 16 | 8 | Sundanese |
0 BMP | U+1CD0..U+1CFF | Vedic Extensions | 48 | 43 | Common (16 characters), Inherited (27 characters) |
0 BMP | U+1D00..U+1D7F | Phonetic Extensions | 128 | 128 | Cyrillic (2 characters), Greek (15 characters), Latin (111 characters) |
0 BMP | U+1D80..U+1DBF | Phonetic Extensions Supplement | 64 | 64 | Greek (1 character), Latin (63 characters) |
0 BMP | U+1DC0..U+1DFF | Combining Diacritical Marks Supplement | 64 | 64 | Inherited |
0 BMP | U+1E00..U+1EFF | Latin Extended Additional | 256 | 256 | Latin |
0 BMP | U+1F00..U+1FFF | Greek Extended | 256 | 233 | Greek |
0 BMP | U+2000..U+206F | General Punctuation | 112 | 111 | Common (109 characters), Inherited (2 characters) |
0 BMP | U+2070..U+209F | Superscripts and Subscripts | 48 | 42 | Latin (15 characters), Common (27 characters) |
0 BMP | U+20A0..U+20CF | Currency Symbols | 48 | 33 | Common |
0 BMP | U+20D0..U+20FF | Combining Diacritical Marks for Symbols | 48 | 33 | Inherited |
0 BMP | U+2100..U+214F | Letterlike Symbols | 80 | 80 | Greek (1 character), Latin (4 characters), Common (75 characters) |
0 BMP | U+2150..U+218F | Number Forms | 64 | 60 | Latin (41 characters), Common (19 characters) |
0 BMP | U+2190..U+21FF | Arrows | 112 | 112 | Common |
0 BMP | U+2200..U+22FF | Mathematical Operators | 256 | 256 | Common |
0 BMP | U+2300..U+23FF | Miscellaneous Technical | 256 | 256 | Common |
0 BMP | U+2400..U+243F | Control Pictures | 64 | 39 | Common |
0 BMP | U+2440..U+245F | Optical Character Recognition | 32 | 11 | Common |
0 BMP | U+2460..U+24FF | Enclosed Alphanumerics | 160 | 160 | Common |
0 BMP | U+2500..U+257F | Box Drawing | 128 | 128 | Common |
0 BMP | U+2580..U+259F | Block Elements | 32 | 32 | Common |
0 BMP | U+25A0..U+25FF | Geometric Shapes | 96 | 96 | Common |
0 BMP | U+2600..U+26FF | Miscellaneous Symbols | 256 | 256 | Common |
0 BMP | U+2700..U+27BF | Dingbats | 192 | 192 | Common |
0 BMP | U+27C0..U+27EF | Miscellaneous Mathematical Symbols-A | 48 | 48 | Common |
0 BMP | U+27F0..U+27FF | Supplemental Arrows-A | 16 | 16 | Common |
0 BMP | U+2800..U+28FF | Braille Patterns | 256 | 256 | Braille |
0 BMP | U+2900..U+297F | Supplemental Arrows-B | 128 | 128 | Common |
0 BMP | U+2980..U+29FF | Miscellaneous Mathematical Symbols-B | 128 | 128 | Common |
0 BMP | U+2A00..U+2AFF | Supplemental Mathematical Operators | 256 | 256 | Common |
0 BMP | U+2B00..U+2BFF | Miscellaneous Symbols and Arrows | 256 | 253 | Common |
0 BMP | U+2C00..U+2C5F | Glagolitic | 96 | 96 | Glagolitic |
0 BMP | U+2C60..U+2C7F | Latin Extended-C | 32 | 32 | Latin |
0 BMP | U+2C80..U+2CFF | Coptic | 128 | 123 | Coptic |
0 BMP | U+2D00..U+2D2F | Georgian Supplement | 48 | 40 | Georgian |
0 BMP | U+2D30..U+2D7F | Tifinagh | 80 | 59 | Tifinagh |
0 BMP | U+2D80..U+2DDF | Ethiopic Extended | 96 | 79 | Ethiopic |
0 BMP | U+2DE0..U+2DFF | Cyrillic Extended-A | 32 | 32 | Cyrillic |
0 BMP | U+2E00..U+2E7F | Supplemental Punctuation | 128 | 94 | Common |
0 BMP | U+2E80..U+2EFF | CJK Radicals Supplement | 128 | 115 | Han |
0 BMP | U+2F00..U+2FDF | Kangxi Radicals | 224 | 214 | Han |
0 BMP | U+2FF0..U+2FFF | Ideographic Description Characters | 16 | 16 | Common |
0 BMP | U+3000..U+303F | CJK Symbols and Punctuation | 64 | 64 | Han (15 characters), Hangul (2 characters), Common (43 characters), Inherited (4 characters) |
0 BMP | U+3040..U+309F | Hiragana | 96 | 93 | Hiragana (89 characters), Common (2 characters), Inherited (2 characters) |
0 BMP | U+30A0..U+30FF | Katakana | 96 | 96 | Katakana (93 characters), Common (3 characters) |
0 BMP | U+3100..U+312F | Bopomofo | 48 | 43 | Bopomofo |
0 BMP | U+3130..U+318F | Hangul Compatibility Jamo | 96 | 94 | Hangul |
0 BMP | U+3190..U+319F | Kanbun | 16 | 16 | Common |
0 BMP | U+31A0..U+31BF | Bopomofo Extended | 32 | 32 | Bopomofo |
0 BMP | U+31C0..U+31EF | CJK Strokes | 48 | 37 | Common |
0 BMP | U+31F0..U+31FF | Katakana Phonetic Extensions | 16 | 16 | Katakana |
0 BMP | U+3200..U+32FF | Enclosed CJK Letters and Months | 256 | 255 | Hangul (62 characters), Katakana (47 characters), Common (146 characters) |
0 BMP | U+3300..U+33FF | CJK Compatibility | 256 | 256 | Katakana (88 characters), Common (168 characters) |
0 BMP | U+3400..U+4DBF | CJK Unified Ideographs Extension A | 6,592 | 6,592 | Han |
0 BMP | U+4DC0..U+4DFF | Yijing Hexagram Symbols | 64 | 64 | Common |
0 BMP | U+4E00..U+9FFF | CJK Unified Ideographs | 20,992 | 20,992 | Han |
0 BMP | U+A000..U+A48F | Yi Syllables | 1,168 | 1,165 | Yi |
0 BMP | U+A490..U+A4CF | Yi Radicals | 64 | 55 | Yi |
0 BMP | U+A4D0..U+A4FF | Lisu | 48 | 48 | Lisu |
0 BMP | U+A500..U+A63F | Vai | 320 | 300 | Vai |
0 BMP | U+A640..U+A69F | Cyrillic Extended-B | 96 | 96 | Cyrillic |
0 BMP | U+A6A0..U+A6FF | Bamum | 96 | 88 | Bamum |
0 BMP | U+A700..U+A71F | Modifier Tone Letters | 32 | 32 | Common |
0 BMP | U+A720..U+A7FF | Latin Extended-D | 224 | 193 | Latin (188 characters), Common (5 characters) |
0 BMP | U+A800..U+A82F | Syloti Nagri | 48 | 45 | Syloti Nagri |
0 BMP | U+A830..U+A83F | Common Indic Number Forms | 16 | 10 | Common |
0 BMP | U+A840..U+A87F | Phags-pa | 64 | 56 | Phags Pa |
0 BMP | U+A880..U+A8DF | Saurashtra | 96 | 82 | Saurashtra |
0 BMP | U+A8E0..U+A8FF | Devanagari Extended | 32 | 32 | Devanagari |
0 BMP | U+A900..U+A92F | Kayah Li | 48 | 48 | Kayah Li (47 characters), Common (1 character) |
0 BMP | U+A930..U+A95F | Rejang | 48 | 37 | Rejang |
0 BMP | U+A960..U+A97F | Hangul Jamo Extended-A | 32 | 29 | Hangul |
0 BMP | U+A980..U+A9DF | Javanese | 96 | 91 | Javanese (90 characters), Common (1 character) |
0 BMP | U+A9E0..U+A9FF | Myanmar Extended-B | 32 | 31 | Myanmar |
0 BMP | U+AA00..U+AA5F | Cham | 96 | 83 | Cham |
0 BMP | U+AA60..U+AA7F | Myanmar Extended-A | 32 | 32 | Myanmar |
0 BMP | U+AA80..U+AADF | Tai Viet | 96 | 72 | Tai Viet |
0 BMP | U+AAE0..U+AAFF | Meetei Mayek Extensions | 32 | 23 | Meetei Mayek |
0 BMP | U+AB00..U+AB2F | Ethiopic Extended-A | 48 | 32 | Ethiopic |
0 BMP | U+AB30..U+AB6F | Latin Extended-E | 64 | 60 | Latin (56 characters), Greek (1 character), Common (3 characters) |
0 BMP | U+AB70..U+ABBF | Cherokee Supplement | 80 | 80 | Cherokee |
0 BMP | U+ABC0..U+ABFF | Meetei Mayek | 64 | 56 | Meetei Mayek |
0 BMP | U+AC00..U+D7AF | Hangul Syllables | 11,184 | 11,172 | Hangul |
0 BMP | U+D7B0..U+D7FF | Hangul Jamo Extended-B | 80 | 72 | Hangul |
0 BMP | U+D800..U+DB7F | High Surrogates | 896 | 0 | Unknown |
0 BMP | U+DB80..U+DBFF | High Private Use Surrogates | 128 | 0 | Unknown |
0 BMP | U+DC00..U+DFFF | Low Surrogates | 1,024 | 0 | Unknown |
0 BMP | U+E000..U+F8FF | Private Use Area | 6,400 | 6,400 | Unknown |
0 BMP | U+F900..U+FAFF | CJK Compatibility Ideographs | 512 | 472 | Han |
0 BMP | U+FB00..U+FB4F | Alphabetic Presentation Forms | 80 | 58 | Armenian (5 characters), Hebrew (46 characters), Latin (7 characters) |
0 BMP | U+FB50..U+FDFF | Arabic Presentation Forms-A | 688 | 631 | Arabic (629 characters), Common (2 characters) |
0 BMP | U+FE00..U+FE0F | Variation Selectors | 16 | 16 | Inherited |
0 BMP | U+FE10..U+FE1F | Vertical Forms | 16 | 10 | Common |
0 BMP | U+FE20..U+FE2F | Combining Half Marks | 16 | 16 | Cyrillic (2 characters), Inherited (14 characters) |
0 BMP | U+FE30..U+FE4F | CJK Compatibility Forms | 32 | 32 | Common |
0 BMP | U+FE50..U+FE6F | Small Form Variants | 32 | 26 | Common |
0 BMP | U+FE70..U+FEFF | Arabic Presentation Forms-B | 144 | 141 | Arabic (140 characters), Common (1 character) |
0 BMP | U+FF00..U+FFEF | Halfwidth and Fullwidth Forms | 240 | 225 | Hangul (52 characters), Katakana (55 characters), Latin (52 characters), Common (66 characters) |
0 BMP | U+FFF0..U+FFFF | Specials | 16 | 5 | Common |
1 SMP | U+10000..U+1007F | Linear B Syllabary | 128 | 88 | Linear B |
1 SMP | U+10080..U+100FF | Linear B Ideograms | 128 | 123 | Linear B |
1 SMP | U+10100..U+1013F | Aegean Numbers | 64 | 57 | Common |
1 SMP | U+10140..U+1018F | Ancient Greek Numbers | 80 | 79 | Greek |
1 SMP | U+10190..U+101CF | Ancient Symbols | 64 | 14 | Greek (1 character), Common (13 characters) |
1 SMP | U+101D0..U+101FF | Phaistos Disc | 48 | 46 | Common (45 characters), Inherited (1 character) |
1 SMP | U+10280..U+1029F | Lycian | 32 | 29 | Lycian |
1 SMP | U+102A0..U+102DF | Carian | 64 | 49 | Carian |
1 SMP | U+102E0..U+102FF | Coptic Epact Numbers | 32 | 28 | Common (27 characters), Inherited (1 character) |
1 SMP | U+10300..U+1032F | Old Italic | 48 | 39 | Old Italic |
1 SMP | U+10330..U+1034F | Gothic | 32 | 27 | Gothic |
1 SMP | U+10350..U+1037F | Old Permic | 48 | 43 | Old Permic |
1 SMP | U+10380..U+1039F | Ugaritic | 32 | 31 | Ugaritic |
1 SMP | U+103A0..U+103DF | Old Persian | 64 | 50 | Old Persian |
1 SMP | U+10400..U+1044F | Deseret | 80 | 80 | Deseret |
1 SMP | U+10450..U+1047F | Shavian | 48 | 48 | Shavian |
1 SMP | U+10480..U+104AF | Osmanya | 48 | 40 | Osmanya |
1 SMP | U+104B0..U+104FF | Osage | 80 | 72 | Osage |
1 SMP | U+10500..U+1052F | Elbasan | 48 | 40 | Elbasan |
1 SMP | U+10530..U+1056F | Caucasian Albanian | 64 | 53 | Caucasian Albanian |
1 SMP | U+10570..U+105BF | Vithkuqi | 80 | 70 | Vithkuqi |
1 SMP | U+10600..U+1077F | Linear A | 384 | 341 | Linear A |
1 SMP | U+10780..U+107BF | Latin Extended-F | 64 | 57 | Latin |
1 SMP | U+10800..U+1083F | Cypriot Syllabary | 64 | 55 | Cypriot |
1 SMP | U+10840..U+1085F | Imperial Aramaic | 32 | 31 | Imperial Aramaic |
1 SMP | U+10860..U+1087F | Palmyrene | 32 | 32 | Palmyrene |
1 SMP | U+10880..U+108AF | Nabataean | 48 | 40 | Nabataean |
1 SMP | U+108E0..U+108FF | Hatran | 32 | 26 | Hatran |
1 SMP | U+10900..U+1091F | Phoenician | 32 | 29 | Phoenician |
1 SMP | U+10920..U+1093F | Lydian | 32 | 27 | Lydian |
1 SMP | U+10980..U+1099F | Meroitic Hieroglyphs | 32 | 32 | Meroitic Hieroglyphs |
1 SMP | U+109A0..U+109FF | Meroitic Cursive | 96 | 90 | Meroitic Cursive |
1 SMP | U+10A00..U+10A5F | Kharoshthi | 96 | 68 | Kharoshthi |
1 SMP | U+10A60..U+10A7F | Old South Arabian | 32 | 32 | Old South Arabian |
1 SMP | U+10A80..U+10A9F | Old North Arabian | 32 | 32 | Old North Arabian |
1 SMP | U+10AC0..U+10AFF | Manichaean | 64 | 51 | Manichaean |
1 SMP | U+10B00..U+10B3F | Avestan | 64 | 61 | Avestan |
1 SMP | U+10B40..U+10B5F | Inscriptional Parthian | 32 | 30 | Inscriptional Parthian |
1 SMP | U+10B60..U+10B7F | Inscriptional Pahlavi | 32 | 27 | Inscriptional Pahlavi |
1 SMP | U+10B80..U+10BAF | Psalter Pahlavi | 48 | 29 | Psalter Pahlavi |
1 SMP | U+10C00..U+10C4F | Old Turkic | 80 | 73 | Old Turkic |
1 SMP | U+10C80..U+10CFF | Old Hungarian | 128 | 108 | Old Hungarian |
1 SMP | U+10D00..U+10D3F | Hanifi Rohingya | 64 | 50 | Hanifi Rohingya |
1 SMP | U+10E60..U+10E7F | Rumi Numeral Symbols | 32 | 31 | Arabic |
1 SMP | U+10E80..U+10EBF | Yezidi | 64 | 47 | Yezidi |
1 SMP | U+10EC0..U+10EFF | Arabic Extended-C | 64 | 3 | Arabic |
1 SMP | U+10F00..U+10F2F | Old Sogdian | 48 | 40 | Old Sogdian |
1 SMP | U+10F30..U+10F6F | Sogdian | 64 | 42 | Sogdian |
1 SMP | U+10F70..U+10FAF | Old Uyghur | 64 | 26 | Old Uyghur |
1 SMP | U+10FB0..U+10FDF | Chorasmian | 48 | 28 | Chorasmian |
1 SMP | U+10FE0..U+10FFF | Elymaic | 32 | 23 | Elymaic |
1 SMP | U+11000..U+1107F | Brahmi | 128 | 115 | Brahmi |
1 SMP | U+11080..U+110CF | Kaithi | 80 | 68 | Kaithi |
1 SMP | U+110D0..U+110FF | Sora Sompeng | 48 | 35 | Sora Sompeng |
1 SMP | U+11100..U+1114F | Chakma | 80 | 71 | Chakma |
1 SMP | U+11150..U+1117F | Mahajani | 48 | 39 | Mahajani |
1 SMP | U+11180..U+111DF | Sharada | 96 | 96 | Sharada |
1 SMP | U+111E0..U+111FF | Sinhala Archaic Numbers | 32 | 20 | Sinhala |
1 SMP | U+11200..U+1124F | Khojki | 80 | 65 | Khojki |
1 SMP | U+11280..U+112AF | Multani | 48 | 38 | Multani |
1 SMP | U+112B0..U+112FF | Khudawadi | 80 | 69 | Khudawadi |
1 SMP | U+11300..U+1137F | Grantha | 128 | 86 | Grantha (85 characters), Inherited (1 character) |
1 SMP | U+11400..U+1147F | Newa | 128 | 97 | Newa |
1 SMP | U+11480..U+114DF | Tirhuta | 96 | 82 | Tirhuta |
1 SMP | U+11580..U+115FF | Siddham | 128 | 92 | Siddham |
1 SMP | U+11600..U+1165F | Modi | 96 | 79 | Modi |
1 SMP | U+11660..U+1167F | Mongolian Supplement | 32 | 13 | Mongolian |
1 SMP | U+11680..U+116CF | Takri | 80 | 68 | Takri |
1 SMP | U+11700..U+1174F | Ahom | 80 | 65 | Ahom |
1 SMP | U+11800..U+1184F | Dogra | 80 | 60 | Dogra |
1 SMP | U+118A0..U+118FF | Warang Citi | 96 | 84 | Warang Citi |
1 SMP | U+11900..U+1195F | Dives Akuru | 96 | 72 | Dives Akuru |
1 SMP | U+119A0..U+119FF | Nandinagari | 96 | 65 | Nandinagari |
1 SMP | U+11A00..U+11A4F | Zanabazar Square | 80 | 72 | Zanabazar Square |
1 SMP | U+11A50..U+11AAF | Soyombo | 96 | 83 | Soyombo |
1 SMP | U+11AB0..U+11ABF | Unified Canadian Aboriginal Syllabics Extended-A | 16 | 16 | Canadian Aboriginal |
1 SMP | U+11AC0..U+11AFF | Pau Cin Hau | 64 | 57 | Pau Cin Hau |
1 SMP | U+11B00..U+11B5F | Devanagari Extended-A | 96 | 10 | Devanagari |
1 SMP | U+11C00..U+11C6F | Bhaiksuki | 112 | 97 | Bhaiksuki |
1 SMP | U+11C70..U+11CBF | Marchen | 80 | 68 | Marchen |
1 SMP | U+11D00..U+11D5F | Masaram Gondi | 96 | 75 | Masaram Gondi |
1 SMP | U+11D60..U+11DAF | Gunjala Gondi | 80 | 63 | Gunjala Gondi |
1 SMP | U+11EE0..U+11EFF | Makasar | 32 | 25 | Makasar |
1 SMP | U+11F00..U+11F5F | Kawi | 96 | 86 | Kawi |
1 SMP | U+11FB0..U+11FBF | Lisu Supplement | 16 | 1 | Lisu |
1 SMP | U+11FC0..U+11FFF | Tamil Supplement | 64 | 51 | Tamil |
1 SMP | U+12000..U+123FF | Cuneiform | 1,024 | 922 | Cuneiform |
1 SMP | U+12400..U+1247F | Cuneiform Numbers and Punctuation | 128 | 116 | Cuneiform |
1 SMP | U+12480..U+1254F | Early Dynastic Cuneiform | 208 | 196 | Cuneiform |
1 SMP | U+12F90..U+12FFF | Cypro-Minoan | 112 | 99 | Cypro Minoan |
1 SMP | U+13000..U+1342F | Egyptian Hieroglyphs | 1,072 | 1,072 | Egyptian Hieroglyphs |
1 SMP | U+13430..U+1345F | Egyptian Hieroglyph Format Controls | 48 | 38 | Egyptian Hieroglyphs |
1 SMP | U+14400..U+1467F | Anatolian Hieroglyphs | 640 | 583 | Anatolian Hieroglyphs |
1 SMP | U+16800..U+16A3F | Bamum Supplement | 576 | 569 | Bamum |
1 SMP | U+16A40..U+16A6F | Mro | 48 | 43 | Mro |
1 SMP | U+16A70..U+16ACF | Tangsa | 96 | 89 | Tangsa |
1 SMP | U+16AD0..U+16AFF | Bassa Vah | 48 | 36 | Bassa Vah |
1 SMP | U+16B00..U+16B8F | Pahawh Hmong | 144 | 127 | Pahawh Hmong |
1 SMP | U+16E40..U+16E9F | Medefaidrin | 96 | 91 | Medefaidrin |
1 SMP | U+16F00..U+16F9F | Miao | 160 | 149 | Miao |
1 SMP | U+16FE0..U+16FFF | Ideographic Symbols and Punctuation | 32 | 7 | Han (4 characters), Khitan Small Script (1 character), Nushu (1 character), Tangut (1 character) |
1 SMP | U+17000..U+187FF | Tangut | 6,144 | 6,136 | Tangut |
1 SMP | U+18800..U+18AFF | Tangut Components | 768 | 768 | Tangut |
1 SMP | U+18B00..U+18CFF | Khitan Small Script | 512 | 470 | Khitan Small Script |
1 SMP | U+18D00..U+18D7F | Tangut Supplement | 128 | 9 | Tangut |
1 SMP | U+1AFF0..U+1AFFF | Kana Extended-B | 16 | 13 | Katakana |
1 SMP | U+1B000..U+1B0FF | Kana Supplement | 256 | 256 | Hiragana (255 characters), Katakana (1 character) |
1 SMP | U+1B100..U+1B12F | Kana Extended-A | 48 | 35 | Hiragana (32 characters), Katakana (3 characters) |
1 SMP | U+1B130..U+1B16F | Small Kana Extension | 64 | 9 | Hiragana (4 characters), Katakana (5 characters) |
1 SMP | U+1B170..U+1B2FF | Nushu | 400 | 396 | Nüshu |
1 SMP | U+1BC00..U+1BC9F | Duployan | 160 | 143 | Duployan |
1 SMP | U+1BCA0..U+1BCAF | Shorthand Format Controls | 16 | 4 | Common |
1 SMP | U+1CF00..U+1CFCF | Znamenny Musical Notation | 208 | 185 | Common (116 characters), Inherited (69 characters) |
1 SMP | U+1D000..U+1D0FF | Byzantine Musical Symbols | 256 | 246 | Common |
1 SMP | U+1D100..U+1D1FF | Musical Symbols | 256 | 233 | Common (211 characters), Inherited (22 characters) |
1 SMP | U+1D200..U+1D24F | Ancient Greek Musical Notation | 80 | 70 | Greek |
1 SMP | U+1D2C0..U+1D2DF | Kaktovik Numerals | 32 | 20 | Common |
1 SMP | U+1D2E0..U+1D2FF | Mayan Numerals | 32 | 20 | Common |
1 SMP | U+1D300..U+1D35F | Tai Xuan Jing Symbols | 96 | 87 | Common |
1 SMP | U+1D360..U+1D37F | Counting Rod Numerals | 32 | 25 | Common |
1 SMP | U+1D400..U+1D7FF | Mathematical Alphanumeric Symbols | 1,024 | 996 | Common |
1 SMP | U+1D800..U+1DAAF | Sutton SignWriting | 688 | 672 | SignWriting |
1 SMP | U+1DF00..U+1DFFF | Latin Extended-G | 256 | 37 | Latin |
1 SMP | U+1E000..U+1E02F | Glagolitic Supplement | 48 | 38 | Glagolitic |
1 SMP | U+1E030..U+1E08F | Cyrillic Extended-D | 96 | 63 | Cyrillic |
1 SMP | U+1E100..U+1E14F | Nyiakeng Puachue Hmong | 80 | 71 | Nyiakeng Puachue Hmong |
1 SMP | U+1E290..U+1E2BF | Toto | 48 | 31 | Toto |
1 SMP | U+1E2C0..U+1E2FF | Wancho | 64 | 59 | Wancho |
1 SMP | U+1E4D0..U+1E4FF | Nag Mundari | 48 | 42 | Mundari |
1 SMP | U+1E7E0..U+1E7FF | Ethiopic Extended-B | 32 | 28 | Ethiopic |
1 SMP | U+1E800..U+1E8DF | Mende Kikakui | 224 | 213 | Mende Kikakui |
1 SMP | U+1E900..U+1E95F | Adlam | 96 | 88 | Adlam |
1 SMP | U+1EC70..U+1ECBF | Indic Siyaq Numbers | 80 | 68 | Common |
1 SMP | U+1ED00..U+1ED4F | Ottoman Siyaq Numbers | 80 | 61 | Common |
1 SMP | U+1EE00..U+1EEFF | Arabic Mathematical Alphabetic Symbols | 256 | 143 | Arabic |
1 SMP | U+1F000..U+1F02F | Mahjong Tiles | 48 | 44 | Common |
1 SMP | U+1F030..U+1F09F | Domino Tiles | 112 | 100 | Common |
1 SMP | U+1F0A0..U+1F0FF | Playing Cards | 96 | 82 | Common |
1 SMP | U+1F100..U+1F1FF | Enclosed Alphanumeric Supplement | 256 | 200 | Common |
1 SMP | U+1F200..U+1F2FF | Enclosed Ideographic Supplement | 256 | 64 | Hiragana (1 character), Common (63 characters) |
1 SMP | U+1F300..U+1F5FF | Miscellaneous Symbols and Pictographs | 768 | 768 | Common |
1 SMP | U+1F600..U+1F64F | Emoticons | 80 | 80 | Common |
1 SMP | U+1F650..U+1F67F | Ornamental Dingbats | 48 | 48 | Common |
1 SMP | U+1F680..U+1F6FF | Transport and Map Symbols | 128 | 118 | Common |
1 SMP | U+1F700..U+1F77F | Alchemical Symbols | 128 | 124 | Common |
1 SMP | U+1F780..U+1F7FF | Geometric Shapes Extended | 128 | 103 | Common |
1 SMP | U+1F800..U+1F8FF | Supplemental Arrows-C | 256 | 150 | Common |
1 SMP | U+1F900..U+1F9FF | Supplemental Symbols and Pictographs | 256 | 256 | Common |
1 SMP | U+1FA00..U+1FA6F | Chess Symbols | 112 | 98 | Common |
1 SMP | U+1FA70..U+1FAFF | Symbols and Pictographs Extended-A | 144 | 107 | Common |
1 SMP | U+1FB00..U+1FBFF | Symbols for Legacy Computing | 256 | 212 | Common |
2 SIP | U+20000..U+2A6DF | CJK Unified Ideographs Extension B | 42,720 | 42,720 | Han |
2 SIP | U+2A700..U+2B73F | CJK Unified Ideographs Extension C | 4,160 | 4,154 | Han |
2 SIP | U+2B740..U+2B81F | CJK Unified Ideographs Extension D | 224 | 222 | Han |
2 SIP | U+2B820..U+2CEAF | CJK Unified Ideographs Extension E | 5,776 | 5,762 | Han |
2 SIP | U+2CEB0..U+2EBEF | CJK Unified Ideographs Extension F | 7,488 | 7,473 | Han |
2 SIP | U+2EBF0..U+2EE5F | CJK Unified Ideographs Extension I | 624 | 622 | Han |
2 SIP | U+2F800..U+2FA1F | CJK Compatibility Ideographs Supplement | 544 | 542 | Han |
3 TIP | U+30000..U+3134F | CJK Unified Ideographs Extension G | 4,944 | 4,939 | Han |
3 TIP | U+31350..U+323AF | CJK Unified Ideographs Extension H | 4,192 | 4,192 | Han |
14 SSP | U+E0000..U+E007F | Tags | 128 | 97 | Common |
14 SSP | U+E0100..U+E01EF | Variation Selectors Supplement | 240 | 240 | Inherited |
15 PUA-A | U+F0000..U+FFFFF | Supplementary Private Use Area-A | 65,536 | 65,534 | Unknown |
16 PUA-B | U+100000..U+10FFFF | Supplementary Private Use Area-B | 65,536 | 65,534 | Unknown |
|
Script
Each assigned character can have a single value for its "Script" property, signifying to which script it belongs.[19] The value is a four-letter code in the range Aaaa-Zzzz, as available in ISO 15924, which is mapped to a writing system. Apart from when describing the background and usage of a script, Unicode does not use a connection between a script and languages that use that script. So "Hebrew" refers to the Hebrew script, not to the Hebrew language.
The special code Zyyy for "Common" allows a single value for a character that is used in multiple scripts. The code Zinh "Inherited script", used for combining characters and certain other special-purpose code points, indicates that a character "inherits" its script identity from the character with which it is combined. (Unicode formerly used the private code Qaai for this purpose.) The code Zzzz "Unknown" is used for all characters that do not belong to a script (i.e. the default value), such as symbols and formatting characters. Overall, characters of a single script can be scattered over multiple blocks, like Latin characters. And the other way around too: multiple scripts can be present is a single block, e.g. block Letterlike Symbols contains characters from the Latin, Greek and Common scripts.
When the Script is "" (blank), according to Unicode the character does not belong to a script. This pertains to symbols, because the existing ISO script codes "Zmth" (Mathematical notation), "Zsym" (Symbol), and "Zsye" (Symbol, emoji variant) are not used in Unicode. The "Script" property is also blank for code points that are not a typographic character like controls, substitutes, and private use code points.
If there is a specific script alias name in ISO 15924, it is used in the character name: U+0041 A LATIN CAPITAL LETTER A, and U+05D0 א HEBREW LETTER ALEF.
ISO 15924 | Script in Unicode[e] | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Code | ISO number | ISO formal name | Directionality | Unicode Alias[f] | Version | Characters | Notes | Description |
Adlm | 166 | Adlam | right-to-left script | Adlam | 9.0 | 88 | Ch 19.9 | |
Afak | 439 | Afaka | varies | — Not in Unicode, proposal is explored[lower-roman 1] | ||||
Aghb | 239 | Caucasian Albanian | left-to-right | Caucasian Albanian | 7.0 | 53 | Ancient/historic | Ch 8.11 |
Ahom | 338 | Ahom, Tai Ahom | left-to-right | Ahom | 8.0 | 65 | Ancient/historic | Ch 15.16 |
Arab | 160 | Arabic | right-to-left script | Arabic | 1.0 | 1,368 | Ch 9.2 | |
Aran | 161 | Arabic (Nastaliq variant) | mixed | — Typographic variant of Arabic (see § Arab) | ||||
Armi | 124 | Imperial Aramaic | right-to-left script | Imperial Aramaic | 5.2 | 31 | Ancient/historic | Ch 10.4 |
Armn | 230 | Armenian | left-to-right | Armenian | 1.0 | 96 | Ch 7.6 | |
Avst | 134 | Avestan | right-to-left script | Avestan | 5.2 | 61 | Ancient/historic | Ch 10.7 |
Bali | 360 | Balinese | left-to-right | Balinese | 5.0 | 124 | Ch 17.3 | |
Bamu | 435 | Bamum | left-to-right | Bamum | 5.2 | 657 | Ch 19.6 | |
Bass | 259 | Bassa Vah | left-to-right | Bassa Vah | 7.0 | 36 | Ancient/historic | Ch 19.7 |
Batk | 365 | Batak | left-to-right | Batak | 6.0 | 56 | Ch 17.6 | |
Beng | 325 | Bengali (Bangla) | left-to-right | Bengali | 1.0 | 96 | Ch 12.2 | |
Bhks | 334 | Bhaiksuki | left-to-right | Bhaiksuki | 9.0 | 97 | Ancient/historic | Ch 14.3 |
Blis | 550 | Blissymbols | varies | — Not in Unicode, proposal is explored[lower-roman 1] | ||||
Bopo | 285 | Bopomofo | left-to-right, right-to-left script | Bopomofo | 1.0 | 77 | Ch 18.3 | |
Brah | 300 | Brahmi | left-to-right | Brahmi | 6.0 | 115 | Ancient/historic | Ch 14.1 |
Brai | 570 | Braille | left-to-right | Braille | 3.0 | 256 | Ch 21.1 | |
Bugi | 367 | Buginese | left-to-right | Buginese | 4.1 | 30 | Ch 17.2 | |
Buhd | 372 | Buhid | left-to-right | Buhid | 3.2 | 20 | Ch 17.1 | |
Cakm | 349 | Chakma | left-to-right | Chakma | 6.1 | 71 | Ch 13.11 | |
Cans | 440 | Unified Canadian Aboriginal Syllabics | left-to-right | Canadian Aboriginal | 3.0 | 726 | Ch 20.2 | |
Cari | 201 | Carian | left-to-right, right-to-left script | Carian | 5.1 | 49 | Ancient/historic | Ch 8.5 |
Cham | 358 | Cham | left-to-right | Cham | 5.1 | 83 | Ch 16.10 | |
Cher | 445 | Cherokee | left-to-right | Cherokee | 3.0 | 172 | Ch 20.1 | |
Chis | 298 | Chisoi | left-to-right | — Not in Unicode, proposal is mature[lower-roman 2] | ||||
Chrs | 109 | Chorasmian | right-to-left script, top-to-bottom | Chorasmian | 13.0 | 28 | Ancient/historic | Ch 10.8 |
Cirt | 291 | Cirth | varies | — Not in Unicode | ||||
Copt | 204 | Coptic | left-to-right | Coptic | 1.0 | 137 | Ancient/historic, disunified from Greek in 4.1 | Ch 7.3 |
Cpmn | 402 | Cypro-Minoan | left-to-right | Cypro Minoan | 14.0 | 99 | Ancient/historic | Ch 8.4 |
Cprt | 403 | Cypriot syllabary | right-to-left script | Cypriot | 4.0 | 55 | Ancient/historic | Ch 8.3 |
Cyrl | 220 | Cyrillic | left-to-right | Cyrillic | 1.0 | 506 | Includes typographic variant Old Church Slavonic (see § Cyrs) | Ch 7.4 |
Cyrs | 221 | Cyrillic (Old Church Slavonic variant) | varies | — Typographic variant of Cyrillic (see § Cyrl); Ancient/historic | ||||
Deva | 315 | Devanagari (Nagari) | left-to-right | Devanagari | 1.0 | 164 | Ch 12.1 | |
Diak | 342 | Dives Akuru | left-to-right | Dives Akuru | 13.0 | 72 | Ancient/historic | Ch 15.15 |
Dogr | 328 | Dogra | left-to-right | Dogra | 11.0 | 60 | Ancient/historic | Ch 15.18 |
Dsrt | 250 | Deseret (Mormon) | left-to-right | Deseret | 3.1 | 80 | Ch 20.4 | |
Dupl | 755 | Duployan shorthand, Duployan stenography | left-to-right | Duployan | 7.0 | 143 | Ch 21.6 | |
Egyd | 070 | Egyptian demotic | mixed | — Not in Unicode | ||||
Egyh | 060 | Egyptian hieratic | mixed | — Not in Unicode | ||||
Egyp | 050 | Egyptian hieroglyphs | right-to-left script, left-to-right | Egyptian Hieroglyphs | 5.2 | 1,110 | Ancient/historic | Ch 11.4 |
Elba | 226 | Elbasan | left-to-right | Elbasan | 7.0 | 40 | Ancient/historic | Ch 8.10 |
Elym | 128 | Elymaic | right-to-left script | Elymaic | 12.0 | 23 | Ancient/historic | Ch 10.9 |
Ethi | 430 | Ethiopic (Geʻez) | left-to-right | Ethiopic | 3.0 | 523 | Ch 19.1 | |
Gara | 164 | Garay | right-to-left | — Not in Unicode, approved for version 16.0[lower-roman 3] | ||||
Geok | 241 | Khutsuri (Asomtavruli and Nuskhuri) | left-to-right | Georgian | Unicode groups Khutsori, Asomtavruli and Nuskhuri into 'Georgian' (see § Geok). Similarly, Mkhedruli and Mtavruli are 'Georgian' (see § Geor) | Ch 7.7 | ||
Geor | 240 | Georgian (Mkhedruli and Mtavruli) | left-to-right | Georgian | 1.0 | 173 | In Unicode this also includes Nuskhuri (Geok) | Ch 7.7 |
Glag | 225 | Glagolitic | left-to-right | Glagolitic | 4.1 | 134 | Ancient/historic | Ch 7.5 |
Gong | 312 | Gunjala Gondi | left-to-right | Gunjala Gondi | 11.0 | 63 | Ch 13.15 | |
Gonm | 313 | Masaram Gondi | left-to-right | Masaram Gondi | 10.0 | 75 | Ch 13.14 | |
Goth | 206 | Gothic | left-to-right | Gothic | 3.1 | 27 | Ancient/historic | Ch 8.9 |
Gran | 343 | Grantha | left-to-right | Grantha | 7.0 | 85 | Ancient/historic | Ch 15.14 |
Grek | 200 | Greek | left-to-right | Greek | 1.0 | 518 | Directionality sometimes as boustrophedon | Ch 7.2 |
Gujr | 320 | Gujarati | left-to-right | Gujarati | 1.0 | 91 | Ch 12.4 | |
Gukh | 397 | Gurung Khema | left-to-right | — Not in Unicode, approved for version 16.0[lower-roman 3] | ||||
Guru | 310 | Gurmukhi | left-to-right | Gurmukhi | 1.0 | 80 | Ch 12.3 | |
Hanb | 503 | Han with Bopomofo (alias for Han + Bopomofo) | mixed | — See § Hani, § Bopo | ||||
Hang | 286 | Hangul (Hangŭl, Hangeul) | left-to-right, vertical right-to-left | Hangul | 1.0 | 11,739 | Hangul syllables relocated in 2.0 | Ch 18.6 |
Hani | 500 | Han (Hanzi, Kanji, Hanja) | top-to-bottom, columns right-to-left (historically) | Han | 1.0 | 99,030 | Ch 18.1 | |
Hano | 371 | Hanunoo (Hanunóo) | left-to-right, bottom-to-top | Hanunoo | 3.2 | 21 | Ch 17.1 | |
Hans | 501 | Han (Simplified variant) | varies | — Subset of Han (Hanzi, Kanji, Hanja) (see § Hani) | ||||
Hant | 502 | Han (Traditional variant) | varies | — Subset of § Hani | ||||
Hatr | 127 | Hatran | right-to-left script | Hatran | 8.0 | 26 | Ancient/historic | Ch 10.12 |
Hebr | 125 | Hebrew | right-to-left script | Hebrew | 1.0 | 134 | Ch 9.1 | |
Hira | 410 | Hiragana | vertical right-to-left, left-to-right | Hiragana | 1.0 | 381 | Ch 18.4 | |
Hluw | 080 | Anatolian Hieroglyphs (Luwian Hieroglyphs, Hittite Hieroglyphs) | left-to-right | Anatolian Hieroglyphs | 8.0 | 583 | Ancient/historic | Ch 11.6 |
Hmng | 450 | Pahawh Hmong | left-to-right | Pahawh Hmong | 7.0 | 127 | Ch 16.11 | |
Hmnp | 451 | Nyiakeng Puachue Hmong | left-to-right | Nyiakeng Puachue Hmong | 12.0 | 71 | Ch 16.12 | |
Hrkt | 412 | Japanese syllabaries (alias for Hiragana + Katakana) | vertical right-to-left, left-to-right | Katakana or Hiragana | See § Hira, § Kana | Ch 18.4 | ||
Hung | 176 | Old Hungarian (Hungarian Runic) | right-to-left script | Old Hungarian | 8.0 | 108 | Ancient/historic | Ch 8.8 |
Inds | 610 | Indus (Harappan) | mixed | — Not in Unicode, proposal is explored[lower-roman 1] | ||||
Ital | 210 | Old Italic (Etruscan, Oscan, etc.) | right-to-left script, left-to-right | Old Italic | 3.1 | 39 | Ancient/historic | Ch 8.6 |
Jamo | 284 | Jamo (alias for Jamo subset of Hangul) | varies | — Subset of § Hang | ||||
Java | 361 | Javanese | left-to-right | Javanese | 5.2 | 90 | Ch 17.4 | |
Jpan | 413 | Japanese (alias for Han + Hiragana + Katakana) | varies | — See § Hani, § Hira and § Kana | ||||
Jurc | 510 | Jurchen | left-to-right | — Not in Unicode | ||||
Kali | 357 | Kayah Li | left-to-right | Kayah Li | 5.1 | 47 | Ch 16.9 | |
Kana | 411 | Katakana | vertical right-to-left, left-to-right | Katakana | 1.0 | 321 | Ch 18.4 | |
Kawi | 368 | Kawi | left-to-right | Kawi | 15.0 | 86 | Ancient/historic | Ch 17.9 |
Khar | 305 | Kharoshthi | right-to-left script | Kharoshthi | 4.1 | 68 | Ancient/historic | Ch 14.2 |
Khmr | 355 | Khmer | left-to-right | Khmer | 3.0 | 146 | Ch 16.4 | |
Khoj | 322 | Khojki | left-to-right | Khojki | 7.0 | 65 | Ancient/historic | Ch 15.7 |
Kitl | 505 | Khitan large script | left-to-right | — Not in Unicode | ||||
Kits | 288 | Khitan small script | vertical right-to-left | Khitan Small Script | 13.0 | 471 | Ancient/historic | Ch 18.12 |
Knda | 345 | Kannada | left-to-right | Kannada | 1.0 | 91 | Ch 12.8 | |
Kore | 287 | Korean (alias for Hangul + Han) | left-to-right | — See § Hani, § Hang | ||||
Kpel | 436 | Kpelle | left-to-right | — Not in Unicode, proposal is explored[lower-roman 1] | ||||
Krai | 396 | Kirat Rai | left-to-right | — Not in Unicode, approved for version 16.0[lower-roman 3] | ||||
Kthi | 317 | Kaithi | left-to-right | Kaithi | 5.2 | 68 | Ancient/historic | Ch 15.2 |
Lana | 351 | Tai Tham (Lanna) | left-to-right | Tai Tham | 5.2 | 127 | Ch 16.7 | |
Laoo | 356 | Lao | left-to-right | Lao | 1.0 | 83 | Ch 16.2 | |
Latf | 217 | Latin (Fraktur variant) | varies | — Typographic variant of Latin (see § Latn) | ||||
Latg | 216 | Latin (Gaelic variant) | left-to-right | — Typographic variant of Latin (see § Latn) | ||||
Latn | 215 | Latin | left-to-right | Latin | 1.0 | 1,481 | See also: Latin script in Unicode | Ch 7.1 |
Leke | 364 | Leke | left-to-right | — Not in Unicode | ||||
Lepc | 335 | Lepcha (Róng) | left-to-right | Lepcha | 5.1 | 74 | Ch 13.12 | |
Limb | 336 | Limbu | left-to-right | Limbu | 4.0 | 68 | Ch 13.6 | |
Lina | 400 | Linear A | left-to-right | Linear A | 7.0 | 341 | Ancient/historic | Ch 8.1 |
Linb | 401 | Linear B | left-to-right | Linear B | 4.0 | 211 | Ancient/historic | Ch 8.2 |
Lisu | 399 | Lisu (Fraser) | left-to-right | Lisu | 5.2 | 49 | Ch 18.9 | |
Loma | 437 | Loma | left-to-right | — Not in Unicode, proposal is explored[lower-roman 1] | ||||
Lyci | 202 | Lycian | left-to-right | Lycian | 5.1 | 29 | Ancient/historic | Ch 8.5 |
Lydi | 116 | Lydian | right-to-left script | Lydian | 5.1 | 27 | Ancient/historic | Ch 8.5 |
Mahj | 314 | Mahajani | left-to-right | Mahajani | 7.0 | 39 | Ancient/historic | Ch 15.6 |
Maka | 366 | Makasar | left-to-right | Makasar | 11.0 | 25 | Ancient/historic | Ch 17.8 |
Mand | 140 | Mandaic, Mandaean | right-to-left script | Mandaic | 6.0 | 29 | Ch 9.5 | |
Mani | 139 | Manichaean | right-to-left script | Manichaean | 7.0 | 51 | Ancient/historic | Ch 10.5 |
Marc | 332 | Marchen | left-to-right | Marchen | 9.0 | 68 | Ancient/historic | Ch 14.5 |
Maya | 090 | Mayan hieroglyphs | mixed | — Not in Unicode | ||||
Medf | 265 | Medefaidrin (Oberi Okaime, Oberi Ɔkaimɛ) | left-to-right | Medefaidrin | 11.0 | 91 | Ch 19.10 | |
Mend | 438 | Mende Kikakui | right-to-left script | Mende Kikakui | 7.0 | 213 | Ch 19.8 | |
Merc | 101 | Meroitic Cursive | right-to-left script | Meroitic Cursive | 6.1 | 90 | Ancient/historic | Ch 11.5 |
Mero | 100 | Meroitic Hieroglyphs | right-to-left script | Meroitic Hieroglyphs | 6.1 | 32 | Ancient/historic | Ch 11.5 |
Mlym | 347 | Malayalam | left-to-right | Malayalam | 1.0 | 118 | Ch 12.9 | |
Modi | 324 | Modi, Moḍī | left-to-right | Modi | 7.0 | 79 | Ancient/historic | Ch 15.12 |
Mong | 145 | Mongolian | vertical left-to-right, left-to-right | Mongolian | 3.0 | 168 | Mong includes Clear and Manchu scripts | Ch 13.5 |
Moon | 218 | Moon (Moon code, Moon script, Moon type) | mixed | — Not in Unicode, proposal is explored[lower-roman 1] | ||||
Mroo | 264 | Mro, Mru | left-to-right | Mro | 7.0 | 43 | Ch 13.8 | |
Mtei | 337 | Meitei Mayek (Meithei, Meetei) | left-to-right | Meetei Mayek | 5.2 | 79 | Ch 13.7 | |
Mult | 323 | Multani | left-to-right | Multani | 8.0 | 38 | Ancient/historic | Ch 15.10 |
Mymr | 350 | Myanmar (Burmese) | left-to-right | Myanmar | 3.0 | 223 | Ch 16.3 | |
Nagm | 295 | Nag Mundari | left-to-right | Nag Mundari | 15.0 | 42 | ||
Nand | 311 | Nandinagari | left-to-right | Nandinagari | 12.0 | 65 | Ancient/historic | Ch 15.13 |
Narb | 106 | Old North Arabian (Ancient North Arabian) | right-to-left script | Old North Arabian | 7.0 | 32 | Ancient/historic | Ch 10.1 |
Nbat | 159 | Nabataean | right-to-left script | Nabataean | 7.0 | 40 | Ancient/historic | Ch 10.10 |
Newa | 333 | Newa, Newar, Newari, Nepāla lipi | left-to-right | Newa | 9.0 | 97 | Ch 13.3 | |
Nkdb | 085 | Naxi Dongba (na²¹ɕi³³ to³³ba²¹, Nakhi Tomba) | left-to-right | — Not in Unicode | ||||
Nkgb | 420 | Naxi Geba (na²¹ɕi³³ gʌ²¹ba²¹, 'Na-'Khi ²Ggŏ-¹baw, Nakhi Geba) | left-to-right | — Not in Unicode, proposal is explored[lower-roman 1] | ||||
Nkoo | 165 | N’Ko | right-to-left script | NKo | 5.0 | 62 | Ch 19.4 | |
Nshu | 499 | Nüshu | vertical right-to-left | Nushu | 10.0 | 397 | Ch 18.8 | |
Ogam | 212 | Ogham | bottom-to-top, left-to-right | Ogham | 3.0 | 29 | Ancient/historic | Ch 8.14 |
Olck | 261 | Ol Chiki (Ol Cemet’, Ol, Santali) | left-to-right | Ol Chiki | 5.1 | 48 | Ch 13.10 | |
Onao | 296 | Ol Onal | left-to-right | — Not in Unicode, approved for version 16.0[lower-roman 3] | ||||
Orkh | 175 | Old Turkic, Orkhon Runic | right-to-left script | Old Turkic | 5.2 | 73 | Ancient/historic | Ch 14.8 |
Orya | 327 | Oriya (Odia) | left-to-right | Oriya | 1.0 | 91 | Ch 12.5 | |
Osge | 219 | Osage | left-to-right | Osage | 9.0 | 72 | Ch 20.3 | |
Osma | 260 | Osmanya | left-to-right | Osmanya | 4.0 | 40 | Ch 19.2 | |
Ougr | 143 | Old Uyghur | mixed | Old Uyghur | 14.0 | 26 | Ancient/historic | Ch 14.11 |
Palm | 126 | Palmyrene | right-to-left script | Palmyrene | 7.0 | 32 | Ancient/historic | Ch 10.11 |
Pauc | 263 | Pau Cin Hau | left-to-right | Pau Cin Hau | 7.0 | 57 | Ch 16.13 | |
Pcun | 015 | Proto-Cuneiform | left-to-right | — Not in Unicode | ||||
Pelm | 016 | Proto-Elamite | left-to-right | — Not in Unicode | ||||
Perm | 227 | Old Permic | left-to-right | Old Permic | 7.0 | 43 | Ancient/historic | Ch 8.13 |
Phag | 331 | Phags-pa | vertical left-to-right | Phags-pa | 5.0 | 56 | Ancient/historic | Ch 14.4 |
Phli | 131 | Inscriptional Pahlavi | right-to-left script | Inscriptional Pahlavi | 5.2 | 27 | Ancient/historic | Ch 10.6 |
Phlp | 132 | Psalter Pahlavi | right-to-left script | Psalter Pahlavi | 7.0 | 29 | Ancient/historic | Ch 10.6 |
Phlv | 133 | Book Pahlavi | mixed | — Not in Unicode | ||||
Phnx | 115 | Phoenician | right-to-left script | Phoenician | 5.0 | 29 | Ancient/historic[g] | Ch 10.3 |
Piqd | 293 | Klingon (KLI pIqaD) | left-to-right | — Rejected for inclusion in Unicode[lower-roman 4][lower-roman 5] | ||||
Plrd | 282 | Miao (Pollard) | left-to-right | Miao | 6.1 | 149 | Ch 18.10 | |
Prti | 130 | Inscriptional Parthian | right-to-left script | Inscriptional Parthian | 5.2 | 30 | Ancient/historic | Ch 10.6 |
Psin | 103 | Proto-Sinaitic | mixed | — Not in Unicode | ||||
Qaaa-Qabx | 900-949 | Reserved for private use (range) | — Not in Unicode | |||||
Ranj | 303 | Ranjana | left-to-right | — Not in Unicode | ||||
Rjng | 363 | Rejang (Redjang, Kaganga) | left-to-right | Rejang | 5.1 | 37 | Ch 17.5 | |
Rohg | 167 | Hanifi Rohingya | right-to-left script | Hanifi Rohingya | 11.0 | 50 | Ch 16.14 | |
Roro | 620 | Rongorongo | mixed | — Not in Unicode, proposal is explored[lower-roman 1] | ||||
Runr | 211 | Runic | left-to-right, boustrophedon | Runic | 3.0 | 86 | Ancient/historic | Ch 8.7 |
Samr | 123 | Samaritan | right-to-left script, top-to-bottom | Samaritan | 5.2 | 61 | Ch 9.4 | |
Sara | 292 | Sarati | mixed | — Not in Unicode | ||||
Sarb | 105 | Old South Arabian | right-to-left script | Old South Arabian | 5.2 | 32 | Ancient/historic | Ch 10.2 |
Saur | 344 | Saurashtra | left-to-right | Saurashtra | 5.1 | 82 | Ch 13.13 | |
Sgnw | 095 | SignWriting | vertical left-to-right | SignWriting | 8.0 | 672 | Ch 21.7 | |
Shaw | 281 | Shavian (Shaw) | left-to-right | Shavian | 4.0 | 48 | Ch 8.15 | |
Shrd | 319 | Sharada, Śāradā | left-to-right | Sharada | 6.1 | 96 | Ch 15.3 | |
Shui | 530 | Shuishu | left-to-right | — Not in Unicode | ||||
Sidd | 302 | Siddham, Siddhaṃ, Siddhamātṛkā | left-to-right | Siddham | 7.0 | 92 | Ancient/historic | Ch 15.5 |
Sidt | 180 | Sidetic | right-to-left | — Not in Unicode, proposal is mature[lower-roman 2] | ||||
Sind | 318 | Khudawadi, Sindhi | left-to-right | Khudawadi | 7.0 | 69 | Ch 15.9 | |
Sinh | 348 | Sinhala | left-to-right | Sinhala | 3.0 | 111 | Ch 13.2 | |
Sogd | 141 | Sogdian | horizontal and vertical writing in East Asian scripts, top-to-bottom | Sogdian | 11.0 | 42 | Ancient/historic | Ch 14.10 |
Sogo | 142 | Old Sogdian | right-to-left script | Old Sogdian | 11.0 | 40 | Ancient/historic | Ch 14.9 |
Sora | 398 | Sora Sompeng | left-to-right | Sora Sompeng | 6.1 | 35 | Ch 15.17 | |
Soyo | 329 | Soyombo | left-to-right | Soyombo | 10.0 | 83 | Ancient/historic | Ch 14.7 |
Sund | 362 | Sundanese | left-to-right | Sundanese | 5.1 | 72 | Ch 17.7 | |
Sunu | 274 | Sunuwar | left-to-right | — Not in Unicode, approved for version 16.0[lower-roman 3] | ||||
Sylo | 316 | Syloti Nagri | left-to-right | Syloti Nagri | 4.1 | 45 | Ancient/historic | Ch 15.1 |
Syrc | 135 | Syriac | right-to-left script | Syriac | 3.0 | 88 | Includes typographic variants Estrangelo (see § Syre), Western (§ Syrj), and Eastern (§ Syrn) | Ch 9.3 |
Syre | 138 | Syriac (Estrangelo variant) | mixed | — Typographic variant of Syriac (see § Syrc) | ||||
Syrj | 137 | Syriac (Western variant) | mixed | — Typographic variant of Syriac (see § Syrc) | ||||
Syrn | 136 | Syriac (Eastern variant) | mixed | — Typographic variant of Syriac (see § Syrc) | ||||
Tagb | 373 | Tagbanwa | left-to-right | Tagbanwa | 3.2 | 18 | Ch 17.1 | |
Takr | 321 | Takri, Ṭākrī, Ṭāṅkrī | left-to-right | Takri | 6.1 | 68 | Ch 15.4 | |
Tale | 353 | Tai Le | left-to-right | Tai Le | 4.0 | 35 | Ch 16.5 | |
Talu | 354 | New Tai Lue | left-to-right | New Tai Lue | 4.1 | 83 | Ch 16.6 | |
Taml | 346 | Tamil | left-to-right | Tamil | 1.0 | 123 | Ch 12.6 | |
Tang | 520 | Tangut | vertical right-to-left, left-to-right | Tangut | 9.0 | 6,914 | Ancient/historic | Ch 18.11 |
Tavt | 359 | Tai Viet | left-to-right | Tai Viet | 5.2 | 72 | Ch 16.8 | |
Tayo | 380 | Tai Yo | top-to-bottom, columns right-to-left | — Not in Unicode, proposal is mature[lower-roman 2] | ||||
Telu | 340 | Telugu | left-to-right | Telugu | 1.0 | 100 | Ch 12.7 | |
Teng | 290 | Tengwar | left-to-right | — Not in Unicode | ||||
Tfng | 120 | Tifinagh (Berber) | left-to-right, right-to-left script, top-to-bottom, bottom-to-top | Tifinagh | 4.1 | 59 | Ch 19.3 | |
Tglg | 370 | Tagalog (Baybayin, Alibata) | left-to-right | Tagalog | 3.2 | 23 | Ch 17.1 | |
Thaa | 170 | Thaana | right-to-left script | Thaana | 3.0 | 50 | Ch 13.1 | |
Thai | 352 | Thai | left-to-right | Thai | 1.0 | 86 | Ch 16.1 | |
Tibt | 330 | Tibetan | left-to-right | Tibetan | 2.0 | 207 | Added in 1.0, removed in 1.1 and reintroduced in 2.0 | Ch 13.4 |
Tirh | 326 | Tirhuta | left-to-right | Tirhuta | 7.0 | 82 | Ch 15.11 | |
Tnsa | 275 | Tangsa | left-to-right | Tangsa | 14.0 | 89 | Ch 13.18 | |
Todr | 229 | Todhri | right-to-left | — Not in Unicode, approved for version 16.0[lower-roman 3] | ||||
Tols | 299 | Tolong Siki | left-to-right | — Not in Unicode, proposal is mature[lower-roman 2] | ||||
Toto | 294 | Toto | left-to-right | Toto | 14.0 | 31 | Ch 13.17 | |
Tutg | 341 | Tulu-Tigalari | left-to-right | — Not in Unicode, approved for version 16.0[lower-roman 3] | ||||
Ugar | 040 | Ugaritic | left-to-right | Ugaritic | 4.0 | 31 | Ancient/historic | Ch 11.2 |
Vaii | 470 | Vai | left-to-right | Vai | 5.1 | 300 | Ch 19.5 | |
Visp | 280 | Visible Speech | left-to-right | — Not in Unicode | ||||
Vith | 228 | Vithkuqi | left-to-right | Vithkuqi | 14.0 | 70 | Ancient/historic | Ch 8.12 |
Wara | 262 | Warang Citi (Varang Kshiti) | left-to-right | Warang Citi | 7.0 | 84 | Ch 13.9 | |
Wcho | 283 | Wancho | left-to-right | Wancho | 12.0 | 59 | Ch 13.16 | |
Wole | 480 | Woleai | mixed | — Not in Unicode, proposal is explored[lower-roman 1] | ||||
Xpeo | 030 | Old Persian | left-to-right | Old Persian | 4.1 | 50 | Ancient/historic | Ch 11.3 |
Xsux | 020 | Cuneiform, Sumero-Akkadian | left-to-right | Cuneiform | 5.0 | 1,234 | Ancient/historic | Ch 11.1 |
Yezi | 192 | Yezidi | right-to-left script | Yezidi | 13.0 | 47 | Ancient/historic | Ch 9.6 |
Yiii | 460 | Yi | left-to-right | Yi | 3.0 | 1,220 | Ch 18.7 | |
Zanb | 339 | Zanabazar Square (Zanabazarin Dörböljin Useg, Xewtee Dörböljin Bicig, Horizontal Square Script) | left-to-right | Zanabazar Square | 10.0 | 72 | Ancient/historic | Ch 14.6 |
Zinh | 994 | Code for inherited script | Inherited | 657 | ||||
Zmth | 995 | Mathematical notation | — Not a 'script' in Unicode | |||||
Zsym | 996 | Symbols | — Not a 'script' in Unicode | |||||
Zsye | 993 | Symbols (emoji variant) | — Not a 'script' in Unicode | |||||
Zxxx | 997 | Code for unwritten documents | — Not a 'script' in Unicode | |||||
Zyyy | 998 | Code for undetermined script | Common | 8,306 | ||||
Zzzz | 999 | Code for uncoded script | Unknown | 964,234 | In Unicode: All other code points | |||
Notes
| ||||||||
References
|
Normalization properties
Decompositions, decomposition type, canonical combining class, composition exclusions, and more.
Age
Age is the version of the Standard in which the code point was first designated. The version number is shortened to the numbering major.minor, although there more detailed version numbers are used: versions 4.0.0 and 4.0.1 both are named 4.0 as Age. Given the releases, Age can be from the range: 1.1, 2.0, 2.1, 3.0, 3.1, 3.2, 4.0, 4.1, 5.0, 5.1, 5.2, 6.0, 6.1, 6.2, 6.3, 7.0, 8.0, 9.0, 10.0, 11.0, 12.0, 12.1, 13.0, 14.0, 15.0, and 15.1.[20] The long values for Age begin in a V and use an underscore instead of a dot: V1_1, for example.[2] Codepoints without a specifically assigned age value have the value "NA", with the long form "Unassigned".
Deprecated
Once a character has been defined, it will not be removed or reassigned.[21] However, a character may be deprecated, meaning its "use is strongly discouraged".[22] As of Unicode version 15.1, the following fifteen characters are deprecated:[23]
Deprecated characters in Unicode | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Codepoint | Character name | Recommended alternative | Remarks | |
U+0149 | LATIN SMALL LETTER N PRECEDED BY APOSTROPHE | U+02BC U+006E | ʼn | |
U+0673 | ARABIC LETTER ALEF WITH WAVY HAMZA BELOW | U+0627 U+065F | اٟ | |
U+0F77 | TIBETAN VOWEL SIGN VOCALIC RR | U+0FB2 U+0F81[lower-alpha 1] | ྲཱྀ | |
U+0F79 | TIBETAN VOWEL SIGN VOCALIC LL | U+0FB3 U+0F81[lower-alpha 1] | ླཱྀ | |
U+17A3 | KHMER INDEPENDENT VOWEL QAQ | U+17A2 | អ | |
U+17A4 | KHMER INDEPENDENT VOWEL QAA | U+17A2 U+17B6 | អា | |
U+206A | INHIBIT SYMMETRIC SWAPPING | None[lower-alpha 2] | ||
U+206B | ACTIVATE SYMMETRIC SWAPPING | None[lower-alpha 2] | ||
U+206C | INHIBIT ARABIC FORM SHAPING | None[lower-alpha 2] | ||
U+206D | ACTIVATE ARABIC FORM SHAPING | None[lower-alpha 2] | ||
U+206E | NATIONAL DIGIT SHAPES | None[lower-alpha 2] | ||
U+206F | NOMINAL DIGIT SHAPES | None[lower-alpha 2] | ||
U+2329 | LEFT-POINTING ANGLE BRACKET | U+3008[lower-alpha 3] | 〈 | U+27E8 ⟨ MATHEMATICAL LEFT ANGLE BRACKET is recommended for mathematical and other technical use |
U+232A | RIGHT-POINTING ANGLE BRACKET | U+3009[lower-alpha 3] | 〉 | U+27E9 ⟩ MATHEMATICAL RIGHT ANGLE BRACKET is recommended for mathematical and other technical use |
U+E0001 | LANGUAGE TAG | None[lower-alpha 4] | ||
|
Boundaries
The Unicode Standard specifies the following boundary-related properties:
- Grapheme cluster
- Word
- Line
- Sentence
Alias name
Unicode can assign alias names to code points. These names are unique over all names (including regular ones), so they can be used as identifier. There are five possible reasons to add an alias:
- 1. Abbreviation
- Commonly occurring abbreviations or acronyms for control codes, format characters, spaces, and variation selectors.
- For example, U+00A0 NO-BREAK SPACE has alias NBSP. Sometimes presented in a box: NBSP.
- 2. Control
- ISO 6429 names for C0 and C1 control functions and similar commonly occurring names, are added as an alias to the character.
- For example, U+0008 <control-0008> has alias BACKSPACE.
- 3. Correction
- This is a correction for a "serious problem" in the primary character name, usually an error.
- For example, U+2118 ℘ SCRIPT CAPITAL P is actually a lowercase p, and so is given alias name WEIERSTRASS ELLIPTIC FUNCTION: "actually this has the form of a lowercase calligraphic p, despite its name, and through the alias the correct spelling is added." In descriptions, with preceding symbol ※.
- 4. Alternate
- A widely used alternate name for a character.
- Example: U+FEFF ZERO WIDTH NO-BREAK SPACE has alternate BYTE ORDER MARK.
- 5. Figment
- Several documented labels for C1 control code points which were never actually approved in any standard (figment = feigned, in fiction).
- For example, U+0099 <control-0099> has figment alias SINGLE GRAPHIC CHARACTER INTRODUCER. This name is an architectural concept from early drafts of ISO/IEC 10646-1, but it was never approved and standardized.
External links
- Unicode Character Database, annex #44, explaining the different properties
- UnicodeData.txt – a list of all Unicode characters, with their properties
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 "Character Properties" (PDF). The Unicode Standard Version 15. Mountain View, CA: The Unicode Consortium. September 2022. ISBN 978-1-936213-32-0. Retrieved 2022-09-16.
- 1 2 3 "Unicode Standard Annex #44: Unicode Character Database". Unicode. 2017-06-14.
- ↑ "Unicode Standard Annex #44: Unicode Character Database, 4.2.3 Code Point Ranges". Unicode. 2022-09-02.
- ↑ "UCD: Unicode Data".
- ↑ "UCD: Name Aliases". Unicode Character Database. Unicode Consortium. 2019-03-08.
- ↑ "Character design standards – space characters". Character design standards. Microsoft. 1998–1999. Archived from the original on March 14, 2010. Retrieved 2009-05-18.
- ↑ The Unicode Standard 5.0, printed edition, p. 205; also available at "Chapter 6 — Writing Systems and Punctuation" (PDF). The Unicode Standard 5.0, electronic edition. Unicode Consortium. 2006-07-14. p. 11 (205). Retrieved 2022-12-22.
- ↑ "General Punctuation" (PDF). The Unicode Standard 5.1. Unicode Inc. 1991–2008. Retrieved 2009-05-13.
- ↑ Sargent, Murray III (2006-08-29). "Unicode Nearly Plain Text Encoding of Mathematics (Version 2)". Unicode Technical Note #28. Unicode Inc. pp. 19–20. Retrieved 2009-05-19.
- ↑ Gillam, Richard (2002). Unicode Demystified: A Practical Programmer's Guide to the Encoding Standard. Addison-Wesley. ISBN 0-201-70052-2.
- 1 2 Hickson, Ian. "12.5 Named character references". HTML Standard. WHATWG.
- ↑ Wolfram. "\[NegativeThickSpace]". Wolfram Language Documentation.
- ↑ Wolfram. "\[NegativeMediumSpace]". Wolfram Language Documentation.
- ↑ Wolfram. "\[NegativeThinSpace]". Wolfram Language Documentation.
- ↑ Wolfram. "\[NegativeVeryThinSpace]". Wolfram Language Documentation.
- ↑ Faltstrom, P., ed. (August 2010). "Zero Width Non-Joiner". The Unicode Code Points and Internationalized Domain Names for Applications (IDNA). IETF. sec. A.1. doi:10.17487/RFC5892. RFC 5892. Retrieved September 4, 2019.
- ↑ Faltstrom, P., ed. (August 2010). "Zero Width Joiner". The Unicode Code Points and Internationalized Domain Names for Applications (IDNA). IETF. sec. A.2. doi:10.17487/RFC5892. RFC 5892. Retrieved September 4, 2019.
- 1 2 "Unicode Standard Annex #9: Unicode Bidirectional Algorithm". The Unicode Standard. 2017-05-14.
- ↑ "Unicode Standard Annex #24: Unicode Script Property". The Unicode Standard. 2015-06-01.
- ↑ "UCD: Derived Age". Unicode Character Database. Unicode Consortium. 2023-07-28.
- ↑ "Unicode Character Encoding Stability Policies". Unicode. Unicode Consortium. 2017-06-23. Retrieved 2021-07-25.
Once a character is encoded, it will not be moved or removed.
- ↑ "3.4: Characters and Encoding, D13: Deprecated character" (PDF). The Unicode Standard, Version 15.0. Mountain View: Unicode Consortium. 2022-09-13. ISBN 978-1-936213-32-0. Retrieved 2022-09-16.
- ↑ "PropList-15.1.0.txt". Unicode. Unicode Consortium. 2023-08-01. Retrieved 2023-09-12.
- ↑ "Chapter 23.3: Deprecated Format Characters" (PDF). The Unicode Standard, Version 13.0. Mountain View: Unicode Consortium. 2020-03-10. ISBN 978-1-936213-26-9. Retrieved 2021-07-25.
- ↑ "23.9: Tag Characters, Deprecated Use for Language Tagging" (PDF). The Unicode Standard, Version 13.0. Mountain View: Unicode Consortium. 2020-03-10. ISBN 978-1-936213-26-9. Retrieved 2021-07-25.