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8 <title>UnicodeData File Format</title>
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11 <body>
13 <h1>UnicodeData File Format<br>
14 Version 3.0.1</h1>
15 <table border="1" cellspacing="2" cellpadding="0" height="87" width="100%">
16 <tr>
17 <td valign="TOP" width="144">Revision</td>
18 <td valign="TOP">3.0.1</td>
19 </tr>
20 <tr>
21 <td valign="TOP" width="144">Authors</td>
22 <td valign="TOP">Mark Davis and Ken Whistler</td>
23 </tr>
24 <tr>
25 <td valign="TOP" width="144">Date</td>
26 <td valign="TOP">2000-08-17</td>
27 </tr>
28 <tr>
29 <td valign="TOP" width="144">This Version</td>
30 <td valign="TOP"><a
31 href="http://www.unicode.org/Public/3.0-Update1/UnicodeData-3.0.1.html">http://www.unicode.org/Public/3.0-Update1/UnicodeData-3.0.1.html</a></td>
32 </tr>
33 <tr>
34 <td valign="TOP" width="144">Previous Version</td>
35 <td valign="TOP"><a
36 href="http://www.unicode.org/Public/3.0-Update/UnicodeData-3.0.0.html">http://www.unicode.org/Public/3.0-Update/UnicodeData-3.0.0.html</a></td>
37 </tr>
38 <tr>
39 <td valign="TOP" width="144">Latest Version</td>
40 <td valign="TOP"><a
41 href="http://www.unicode.org/Public/UNIDATA/UnicodeData.html">http://www.unicode.org/Public/UNIDATA/UnicodeData.html</a></td>
42 </tr>
43 </table>
44 <p align="center">Copyright © 1995-2000 Unicode, Inc. All Rights reserved.<br>
45 <i>For more information, including Disclamer and Limitations, see <a
46 href="UnicodeCharacterDatabase-3.0.1.html">UnicodeCharacterDatabase-3.0.1.html</a></i></p>
47 <p>This document describes the format of the UnicodeData.txt file, which is one
48 of the files in the Unicode Character Database. The document is divided into the
49 following sections:
50 <ul>
51 <li><a href="#Field Formats">Field Formats</a>
52 <ul>
53 <li><a href="#General Category">General Category</a></li>
54 <li><a href="#Bidirectional Category">Bidirectional Category</a></li>
55 <li><a href="#Character Decomposition">Character Decomposition Mapping</a></li>
56 <li><a href="#Canonical Combining Classes">Canonical Combining Classes</a></li>
57 <li><a href="#Decompositions and Normalization">Decompositions and
58 Normalization</a></li>
59 <li><a href="#Case Mappings">Case Mappings</a></li>
60 </ul>
61 </li>
62 <li><a href="#Property Invariants">Property Invariants</a></li>
63 <li><a href="#Modification History">Modification History</a></li>
64 </ul>
65 <p><b>Warning: </b>the information in this file does not completely describe the
66 use and interpretation of Unicode character properties and behavior. It must be
67 used in conjunction with the data in the other files in the <a
68 href="UnicodeCharacterDatabase-3.0.1.html">Unicode Character Database</a>, and
69 relies on the notation and definitions supplied in <i><a
70 href="http://www.unicode.org/unicode/standard/versions/Unicode3.0.html">The
71 Unicode Standard</a></i>. All chapter references are to Version 3.0 of the
72 standard.</p>
73 <h2><a name="Field Formats"></a>Field Formats</h2>
74 <p>The file consists of lines containing fields separated by semicolons. Each
75 line represents the data for one encoded character in the Unicode Standard.
76 Every encoded character has a data entry, with the exception of certain special
77 ranges, as detailed below.
78 <ul>
79 <li>There are nine special ranges of characters that are represented only by
80 their start and end characters, since the properties in the file are
81 uniform, except for code values (which are all sequential and assigned).</li>
82 <li>The names of CJK ideograph characters and the names and decompositions of
83 Hangul syllable characters are algorithmically derivable. (See the Unicode
84 Standard and <a href="http://www.unicode.org/unicode/reports/tr15/">Unicode
85 Standard Annex #15</a> for more information).</li>
86 <li>Surrogate code values and private use characters have no names.</li>
87 <li>The Private Use character outside of the BMP (U+F0000..U+FFFFD,
88 U+100000..U+10FFFD) are listed as distinct ranges. These correspond to surrogate pairs
89 where the first surrogate is in the High Surrogate Private Use section.</li>
90 </ul>
91 <p>The exact ranges represented by start and end characters are:
92 <ul>
93 <li>CJK Ideographs Extension A (U+3400 - U+4DB5)</li>
94 <li>CJK Ideographs (U+4E00 - U+9FA5)</li>
95 <li>Hangul Syllables (U+AC00 - U+D7A3)</li>
96 <li>Non-Private Use High Surrogates (U+D800 - U+DB7F)</li>
97 <li>Private Use High Surrogates (U+DB80 - U+DBFF)</li>
98 <li>Low Surrogates (U+DC00 - U+DFFF)</li>
99 <li>The Private Use Area (U+E000 - U+F8FF)</li>
100 <li>Plane 15 Private Use Area (U+F0000 - U+FFFFD)</li>
101 <li>Plane 16 Private Use Area (U+100000 - U+10FFFD)</li>
102 </ul>
103 <p>The following table describes the format and meaning of each field in a data
104 entry in the UnicodeData file. Fields which contain normative information are so
105 indicated.</p>
106 <table border="1" cellspacing="2" cellpadding="2">
107 <tr>
108 <th valign="top" align="LEFT">
109 <p align="LEFT">Field</th>
110 <th valign="top" align="LEFT">
111 <p align="LEFT">Name</th>
112 <th valign="top" align="LEFT">
113 <p align="LEFT">Status</th>
114 <th valign="top" align="LEFT">
115 <p align="LEFT">Explanation</th>
116 </tr>
117 <tr>
118 <th valign="top">0</th>
119 <td valign="top">Code value</td>
120 <td valign="top">normative</td>
121 <td valign="top">Code value. For characters in the range U+0000..U+FFFD
122 the code value uses a 4-digit hexadecimal format; for characters in the
123 range U+10000..U+FFFFD the code value uses a 5-digit hexadecimal format;
124 and for characters in the range U+100000..U+10FFFD the code value uses a
125 6-digit hexadecimal format.</td>
126 </tr>
127 <tr>
128 <th valign="top">1</th>
129 <td valign="top">Character name</td>
130 <td valign="top">normative</td>
131 <td valign="top">These names match exactly the names published in Chapter 14
132 of the Unicode Standard, Version 3.0.</td>
133 </tr>
134 <tr>
135 <th valign="top">2</th>
136 <td valign="top"><a href="#General Category">General Category</a></td>
137 <td valign="top">normative / informative<br>
138 (see below)</td>
139 <td valign="top">This is a useful breakdown into various &quot;character
140 types&quot; which can be used as a default categorization in
141 implementations. See below for a brief explanation.</td>
142 </tr>
143 <tr>
144 <th valign="top">3</th>
145 <td valign="top"><a href="#Canonical Combining Classes">Canonical Combining
146 Classes</a></td>
147 <td valign="top">normative</td>
148 <td valign="top">The classes used for the Canonical Ordering Algorithm in
149 the Unicode Standard. These classes are also printed in Chapter 4 of the
150 Unicode Standard.</td>
151 </tr>
152 <tr>
153 <th valign="top">4</th>
154 <td valign="top"><a href="#Bidirectional Category">Bidirectional Category</a></td>
155 <td valign="top">normative</td>
156 <td valign="top">See the list below for an explanation of the abbreviations
157 used in this field. These are the categories required by the Bidirectional
158 Behavior Algorithm in the Unicode Standard. These categories are
159 summarized in Chapter 3 of the Unicode Standard.</td>
160 </tr>
161 <tr>
162 <th valign="top">5</th>
163 <td valign="top"><a href="#Character Decomposition">Character Decomposition
164 Mapping</a></td>
165 <td valign="top">normative</td>
166 <td valign="top">In the Unicode Standard, not all of the mappings are full
167 (maximal) decompositions. Recursive application of look-up for
168 decompositions will, in all cases, lead to a maximal decomposition. The
169 decomposition mappings match exactly the decomposition mappings published
170 with the character names in the Unicode Standard.</td>
171 </tr>
172 <tr>
173 <th valign="top">6</th>
174 <td valign="top">Decimal digit value</td>
175 <td valign="top">normative</td>
176 <td valign="top">This is a numeric field. If the character has the decimal
177 digit property, as specified in Chapter 4 of the Unicode Standard, the
178 value of that digit is represented with an integer value in this field</td>
179 </tr>
180 <tr>
181 <th valign="top">7</th>
182 <td valign="top">Digit value</td>
183 <td valign="top">normative</td>
184 <td valign="top">This is a numeric field. If the character represents a
185 digit, not necessarily a decimal digit, the value is here. This covers
186 digits which do not form decimal radix forms, such as the compatibility
187 superscript digits</td>
188 </tr>
189 <tr>
190 <th valign="top">8</th>
191 <td valign="top">Numeric value</td>
192 <td valign="top">normative</td>
193 <td valign="top">This is a numeric field. If the character has the numeric
194 property, as specified in Chapter 4 of the Unicode Standard, the value of
195 that character is represented with an integer or rational number in this
196 field. This includes fractions as, e.g., &quot;1/5&quot; for U+2155 VULGAR
197 FRACTION ONE FIFTH Also included are numerical values for compatibility
198 characters such as circled numbers.</td>
199 </tr>
200 <tr>
201 <th valign="top">9</th>
202 <td valign="top">Mirrored</td>
203 <td valign="top">normative</td>
204 <td valign="top">If the character has been identified as a
205 &quot;mirrored&quot; character in bidirectional text, this field has the
206 value &quot;Y&quot;; otherwise &quot;N&quot;. The list of mirrored
207 characters is also printed in Chapter 4 of the Unicode Standard.</td>
208 </tr>
209 <tr>
210 <th valign="top">10</th>
211 <td valign="top">Unicode 1.0 Name</td>
212 <td valign="top">informative</td>
213 <td valign="top">This is the old name as published in Unicode 1.0. This name
214 is only provided when it is significantly different from the Unicode 3.0
215 name for the character.</td>
216 </tr>
217 <tr>
218 <th valign="top">11</th>
219 <td valign="top">10646 comment field</td>
220 <td valign="top">informative</td>
221 <td valign="top">This is the ISO 10646 comment field. It appears in parentheses
222 in the 10646 names list, or contains an asterisk to mark an Annex P note.</td>
223 </tr>
224 <tr>
225 <th valign="top">12</th>
226 <td valign="top"><a href="#Case Mappings">Uppercase Mapping</a></td>
227 <td valign="top">informative</td>
228 <td valign="top">Upper case equivalent mapping. If a character is part of an
229 alphabet with case distinctions, and has an upper case equivalent, then
230 the upper case equivalent is in this field. See the explanation below on
231 case distinctions. These mappings are always one-to-one, not one-to-many
232 or many-to-one. This field is informative.</td>
233 </tr>
234 <tr>
235 <th valign="top">13</th>
236 <td valign="top"><a href="#Case Mappings">Lowercase Mapping</a></td>
237 <td valign="top">informative</td>
238 <td valign="top">Similar to Uppercase mapping</td>
239 </tr>
240 <tr>
241 <th valign="top">14</th>
242 <td valign="top"><a href="#Case Mappings">Titlecase Mapping</a></td>
243 <td valign="top">informative</td>
244 <td valign="top">Similar to Uppercase mapping</td>
245 </tr>
246 </table>
247 <h3><a name="General Category"></a>General Category</h3>
248 <p>The values in this field are abbreviations for the following. Some of the
249 values are normative, and some are informative. For more information, see the
250 Unicode Standard.</p>
251 <p><b>Note:</b> the standard does not assign information to control characters
252 (except for certain cases in the Bidirectional Algorithm). Implementations will
253 generally also assign categories to certain control characters, notably CR and
254 LF, according to platform conventions.</p>
255 <h4>Normative Categories</h4>
256 <table border="0" cellspacing="2" cellpadding="0">
257 <tr>
258 <th>
259 <p align="LEFT">Abbr.</th>
260 <th>
261 <p align="LEFT">Description</th>
262 </tr>
263 <tr>
264 <td align="CENTER">Lu</td>
265 <td>Letter, Uppercase</td>
266 </tr>
267 <tr>
268 <td align="CENTER">Ll</td>
269 <td>Letter, Lowercase</td>
270 </tr>
271 <tr>
272 <td align="CENTER">Lt</td>
273 <td>Letter, Titlecase</td>
274 </tr>
275 <tr>
276 <td align="CENTER">Mn</td>
277 <td>Mark, Non-Spacing</td>
278 </tr>
279 <tr>
280 <td align="CENTER">Mc</td>
281 <td>Mark, Spacing Combining</td>
282 </tr>
283 <tr>
284 <td align="CENTER">Me</td>
285 <td>Mark, Enclosing</td>
286 </tr>
287 <tr>
288 <td align="CENTER">Nd</td>
289 <td>Number, Decimal Digit</td>
290 </tr>
291 <tr>
292 <td align="CENTER">Nl</td>
293 <td>Number, Letter</td>
294 </tr>
295 <tr>
296 <td align="CENTER">No</td>
297 <td>Number, Other</td>
298 </tr>
299 <tr>
300 <td align="CENTER">Zs</td>
301 <td>Separator, Space</td>
302 </tr>
303 <tr>
304 <td align="CENTER">Zl</td>
305 <td>Separator, Line</td>
306 </tr>
307 <tr>
308 <td align="CENTER">Zp</td>
309 <td>Separator, Paragraph</td>
310 </tr>
311 <tr>
312 <td align="CENTER">Cc</td>
313 <td>Other, Control</td>
314 </tr>
315 <tr>
316 <td align="CENTER">Cf</td>
317 <td>Other, Format</td>
318 </tr>
319 <tr>
320 <td align="CENTER">Cs</td>
321 <td>Other, Surrogate</td>
322 </tr>
323 <tr>
324 <td align="CENTER">Co</td>
325 <td>Other, Private Use</td>
326 </tr>
327 <tr>
328 <td align="CENTER">Cn</td>
329 <td>Other, Not Assigned (no characters in the file have this property)</td>
330 </tr>
331 </table>
332 <h4>Informative Categories</h4>
333 <table border="0" cellspacing="2" cellpadding="0">
334 <tr>
335 <th>
336 <p align="LEFT">Abbr.</th>
337 <th>
338 <p align="LEFT">Description</th>
339 </tr>
340 <tr>
341 <td align="CENTER">Lm</td>
342 <td>Letter, Modifier</td>
343 </tr>
344 <tr>
345 <td align="CENTER">Lo</td>
346 <td>Letter, Other</td>
347 </tr>
348 <tr>
349 <td align="CENTER">Pc</td>
350 <td>Punctuation, Connector</td>
351 </tr>
352 <tr>
353 <td align="CENTER">Pd</td>
354 <td>Punctuation, Dash</td>
355 </tr>
356 <tr>
357 <td align="CENTER">Ps</td>
358 <td>Punctuation, Open</td>
359 </tr>
360 <tr>
361 <td align="CENTER">Pe</td>
362 <td>Punctuation, Close</td>
363 </tr>
364 <tr>
365 <td align="CENTER">Pi</td>
366 <td>Punctuation, Initial quote (may behave like Ps or Pe depending on usage)</td>
367 </tr>
368 <tr>
369 <td align="CENTER">Pf</td>
370 <td>Punctuation, Final quote (may behave like Ps or Pe depending on usage)</td>
371 </tr>
372 <tr>
373 <td align="CENTER">Po</td>
374 <td>Punctuation, Other</td>
375 </tr>
376 <tr>
377 <td align="CENTER">Sm</td>
378 <td>Symbol, Math</td>
379 </tr>
380 <tr>
381 <td align="CENTER">Sc</td>
382 <td>Symbol, Currency</td>
383 </tr>
384 <tr>
385 <td align="CENTER">Sk</td>
386 <td>Symbol, Modifier</td>
387 </tr>
388 <tr>
389 <td align="CENTER">So</td>
390 <td>Symbol, Other</td>
391 </tr>
392 </table>
393 <h3><a name="Bidirectional Category"></a>Bidirectional Category</h3>
394 <p>Please refer to Chapter 3 for an explanation of the algorithm for
395 Bidirectional Behavior and an explanation of the significance of these
396 categories. An up-to-date version can be found on <a
397 href="http://www.unicode.org/unicode/reports/tr9/">Unicode Standard Annex #9:
398 The Bidirectional Algorithm</a>. These values are normative.</p>
399 <table border="0" cellpadding="2">
400 <tr>
401 <th valign="TOP" align="LEFT">
402 <p align="LEFT">Type</th>
403 <th valign="TOP" align="LEFT">
404 <p align="LEFT">Description</th>
405 </tr>
406 <tr>
407 <td valign="TOP"><b>L</b></td>
408 <td valign="TOP">Left-to-Right</td>
409 </tr>
410 <tr>
411 <td valign="TOP"><b>LRE</b></td>
412 <td valign="TOP">Left-to-Right Embedding</td>
413 </tr>
414 <tr>
415 <td valign="TOP"><b>LRO</b></td>
416 <td valign="TOP">Left-to-Right Override</td>
417 </tr>
418 <tr>
419 <td valign="TOP"><b>R</b></td>
420 <td valign="TOP">Right-to-Left</td>
421 </tr>
422 <tr>
423 <td valign="TOP"><b>AL</b></td>
424 <td valign="TOP">Right-to-Left Arabic</td>
425 </tr>
426 <tr>
427 <td valign="TOP"><b>RLE</b></td>
428 <td valign="TOP">Right-to-Left Embedding</td>
429 </tr>
430 <tr>
431 <td valign="TOP"><b>RLO</b></td>
432 <td valign="TOP">Right-to-Left Override</td>
433 </tr>
434 <tr>
435 <td valign="TOP"><b>PDF</b></td>
436 <td valign="TOP">Pop Directional Format</td>
437 </tr>
438 <tr>
439 <td valign="TOP"><b>EN</b></td>
440 <td valign="TOP">European Number</td>
441 </tr>
442 <tr>
443 <td valign="TOP"><b>ES</b></td>
444 <td valign="TOP">European Number Separator</td>
445 </tr>
446 <tr>
447 <td valign="TOP"><b>ET</b></td>
448 <td valign="TOP">European Number Terminator</td>
449 </tr>
450 <tr>
451 <td valign="TOP"><b>AN</b></td>
452 <td valign="TOP">Arabic Number</td>
453 </tr>
454 <tr>
455 <td valign="TOP"><b>CS</b></td>
456 <td valign="TOP">Common Number Separator</td>
457 </tr>
458 <tr>
459 <td valign="TOP"><b>NSM</b></td>
460 <td valign="TOP">Non-Spacing Mark</td>
461 </tr>
462 <tr>
463 <td valign="TOP"><b>BN</b></td>
464 <td valign="TOP">Boundary Neutral</td>
465 </tr>
466 <tr>
467 <td valign="TOP"><b>B</b></td>
468 <td valign="TOP">Paragraph Separator</td>
469 </tr>
470 <tr>
471 <td valign="TOP"><b>S</b></td>
472 <td valign="TOP">Segment Separator</td>
473 </tr>
474 <tr>
475 <td valign="TOP"><b>WS</b></td>
476 <td valign="TOP">Whitespace</td>
477 </tr>
478 <tr>
479 <td valign="TOP"><b>ON</b></td>
480 <td valign="TOP">Other Neutrals</td>
481 </tr>
482 </table>
483 <h3><a name="Character Decomposition"></a>Character Decomposition Mapping</h3>
484 <p>The decomposition is a normative property of a character. The tags supplied
485 with certain decomposition mappings generally indicate formatting information.
486 Where no such tag is given, the mapping is designated as canonical. Conversely,
487 the presence of a formatting tag also indicates that the mapping is a
488 compatibility mapping and not a canonical mapping. In the absence of other
489 formatting information in a compatibility mapping, the tag is used to
490 distinguish it from canonical mappings.</p>
491 <p>In some instances a canonical mapping or a compatibility mapping may consist
492 of a single character. For a canonical mapping, this indicates that the
493 character is a canonical equivalent of another single character. For a
494 compatibility mapping, this indicates that the character is a compatibility
495 equivalent of another single character. The compatibility formatting tags used
496 are:</p>
497 <table border="0" cellspacing="2" cellpadding="0">
498 <tr>
499 <th>Tag</th>
500 <th>
501 <p align="LEFT">Description</th>
502 </tr>
503 <tr>
504 <td align="CENTER">&lt;font&gt;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
505 <td>A font variant (e.g. a blackletter form).</td>
506 </tr>
507 <tr>
508 <td align="CENTER">&lt;noBreak&gt;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
509 <td>A no-break version of a space or hyphen.</td>
510 </tr>
511 <tr>
512 <td align="CENTER">&lt;initial&gt;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
513 <td>An initial presentation form (Arabic).</td>
514 </tr>
515 <tr>
516 <td align="CENTER">&lt;medial&gt;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
517 <td>A medial presentation form (Arabic).</td>
518 </tr>
519 <tr>
520 <td align="CENTER">&lt;final&gt;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
521 <td>A final presentation form (Arabic).</td>
522 </tr>
523 <tr>
524 <td align="CENTER">&lt;isolated&gt;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
525 <td>An isolated presentation form (Arabic).</td>
526 </tr>
527 <tr>
528 <td align="CENTER">&lt;circle&gt;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
529 <td>An encircled form.</td>
530 </tr>
531 <tr>
532 <td align="CENTER">&lt;super&gt;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
533 <td>A superscript form.</td>
534 </tr>
535 <tr>
536 <td align="CENTER">&lt;sub&gt;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
537 <td>A subscript form.</td>
538 </tr>
539 <tr>
540 <td align="CENTER">&lt;vertical&gt;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
541 <td>A vertical layout presentation form.</td>
542 </tr>
543 <tr>
544 <td align="CENTER">&lt;wide&gt;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
545 <td>A wide (or zenkaku) compatibility character.</td>
546 </tr>
547 <tr>
548 <td align="CENTER">&lt;narrow&gt;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
549 <td>A narrow (or hankaku) compatibility character.</td>
550 </tr>
551 <tr>
552 <td align="CENTER">&lt;small&gt;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
553 <td>A small variant form (CNS compatibility).</td>
554 </tr>
555 <tr>
556 <td align="CENTER">&lt;square&gt;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
557 <td>A CJK squared font variant.</td>
558 </tr>
559 <tr>
560 <td align="CENTER">&lt;fraction&gt;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
561 <td>A vulgar fraction form.</td>
562 </tr>
563 <tr>
564 <td align="CENTER">&lt;compat&gt;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
565 <td>Otherwise unspecified compatibility character.</td>
566 </tr>
567 </table>
568 <p><b>Reminder: </b>There is a difference between decomposition and
569 decomposition mapping. The decomposition mappings are defined in the UnicodeData,
570 while the decomposition (also termed &quot;full decomposition&quot;) is defined
571 in Chapter 3 to use those mappings <i>recursively.</i>
572 <ul>
573 <li>The canonical decomposition is formed by recursively applying the
574 canonical mappings, then applying the canonical reordering algorithm.</li>
575 <li>The compatibility decomposition is formed by recursively applying the
576 canonical <em>and</em> compatibility mappings, then applying the canonical
577 reordering algorithm.</li>
578 </ul>
579 <h3><a name="Canonical Combining Classes"></a>Canonical Combining Classes</h3>
580 <table border="0" cellspacing="2" cellpadding="0">
581 <tr>
582 <th>
583 <p align="LEFT">Value</th>
584 <th>
585 <p align="LEFT">Description</th>
586 </tr>
587 <tr>
588 <td align="RIGHT">0:</td>
589 <td>Spacing, split, enclosing, reordrant, and Tibetan subjoined</td>
590 </tr>
591 <tr>
592 <td align="RIGHT">1:</td>
593 <td>Overlays and interior</td>
594 </tr>
595 <tr>
596 <td align="RIGHT">7:</td>
597 <td>Nuktas</td>
598 </tr>
599 <tr>
600 <td align="RIGHT">8:</td>
601 <td>Hiragana/Katakana voicing marks</td>
602 </tr>
603 <tr>
604 <td align="RIGHT">9:</td>
605 <td>Viramas</td>
606 </tr>
607 <tr>
608 <td align="RIGHT">10:</td>
609 <td>Start of fixed position classes</td>
610 </tr>
611 <tr>
612 <td align="RIGHT">199:</td>
613 <td>End of fixed position classes</td>
614 </tr>
615 <tr>
616 <td align="RIGHT">200:</td>
617 <td>Below left attached</td>
618 </tr>
619 <tr>
620 <td align="RIGHT">202:</td>
621 <td>Below attached</td>
622 </tr>
623 <tr>
624 <td align="RIGHT">204:</td>
625 <td>Below right attached</td>
626 </tr>
627 <tr>
628 <td align="RIGHT">208:</td>
629 <td>Left attached (reordrant around single base character)</td>
630 </tr>
631 <tr>
632 <td align="RIGHT">210:</td>
633 <td>Right attached</td>
634 </tr>
635 <tr>
636 <td align="RIGHT">212:</td>
637 <td>Above left attached</td>
638 </tr>
639 <tr>
640 <td align="RIGHT">214:</td>
641 <td>Above attached</td>
642 </tr>
643 <tr>
644 <td align="RIGHT">216:</td>
645 <td>Above right attached</td>
646 </tr>
647 <tr>
648 <td align="RIGHT">218:</td>
649 <td>Below left</td>
650 </tr>
651 <tr>
652 <td align="RIGHT">220:</td>
653 <td>Below</td>
654 </tr>
655 <tr>
656 <td align="RIGHT">222:</td>
657 <td>Below right</td>
658 </tr>
659 <tr>
660 <td align="RIGHT">224:</td>
661 <td>Left (reordrant around single base character)</td>
662 </tr>
663 <tr>
664 <td align="RIGHT">226:</td>
665 <td>Right</td>
666 </tr>
667 <tr>
668 <td align="RIGHT">228:</td>
669 <td>Above left</td>
670 </tr>
671 <tr>
672 <td align="RIGHT">230:</td>
673 <td>Above</td>
674 </tr>
675 <tr>
676 <td align="RIGHT">232:</td>
677 <td>Above right</td>
678 </tr>
679 <tr>
680 <td align="RIGHT">233:</td>
681 <td>Double below</td>
682 </tr>
683 <tr>
684 <td align="RIGHT">234:</td>
685 <td>Double above</td>
686 </tr>
687 <tr>
688 <td align="RIGHT">240:</td>
689 <td>Below (iota subscript)</td>
690 </tr>
691 </table>
692 <p><strong>Note: </strong>some of the combining classes in this list do not
693 currently have members but are specified here for completeness.</p>
694 <h3><a name="Decompositions and Normalization"></a>Decompositions and
695 Normalization</h3>
696 <p>Decomposition is specified in Chapter 3. <a
697 href="http://www.unicode.org/unicode/reports/tr15/"><i>Unicode Standard Annex
698 #15: Unicode Normalization Forms</i></a> specifies the interaction between decomposition
699 and normalization. The most up-to-date version is found on <a
700 href="http://www.unicode.org/unicode/reports/tr15/">http://www.unicode.org/unicode/reports/tr15/</a>.
701 That report specifies how the decompositions defined in UnicodeData.txt are used
702 to derive normalized forms of Unicode text.</p>
703 <p>Note that as of the 2.1.9 update of the Unicode Character Database, the
704 decompositions in the UnicodeData.txt file can be used to recursively derive the
705 full decomposition in canonical order, without the need to separately apply
706 canonical reordering. However, canonical reordering of combining character
707 sequences must still be applied in decomposition when normalizing source text
708 which contains any combining marks.</p>
709 <h3><a name="Case Mappings"></a>Case Mappings</h3>
710 <p>The case mapping is an informative, default mapping. Case itself, on the
711 other hand, has normative status. Thus, for example, 0041 LATIN CAPITAL LETTER A
712 is normatively uppercase, but its lowercase mapping the 0061 LATIN SMALL LETTER
713 A is informative. The reason for this is that case can be considered to be an
714 inherent property of a particular character (and is usually, but not always,
715 derivable from the presence of the terms &quot;CAPITAL&quot; or
716 &quot;SMALL&quot; in the character name), but case mappings between characters
717 are occasionally influenced by local conventions. For example, certain
718 languages, such as Turkish, German, French, or Greek may have small deviations
719 from the default mappings listed in UnicodeData.</p>
720 <p>In addition to uppercase and lowercase, because of the inclusion of certain
721 composite characters for compatibility, such as 01F1 LATIN CAPITAL LETTER DZ,
722 there is a third case, called <i>titlecase</i>, which is used where the first
723 letter of a word is to be capitalized (e.g. UPPERCASE, Titlecase, lowercase). An
724 example of such a titlecase letter is 01F2 LATIN CAPITAL LETTER D WITH SMALL
725 LETTER Z.</p>
726 <p>The uppercase, titlecase and lowercase fields are only included for
727 characters that have a single corresponding character of that type. Composite
728 characters (such as &quot;339D SQUARE CM&quot;) that do not have a single
729 corresponding character of that type can be cased by decomposition.</p>
730 <p>For compatibility with existing parsers, UnicodeData only contains case
731 mappings for characters where they are one-to-one mappings; it also omits
732 information about context-sensitive case mappings. Information about these
733 special cases can be found in a separate data file, <a
734 href="http://www.unicode.org/Public/3.0-Update1/">SpecialCasing.txt</a>, which
735 has been added starting with the 2.1.8 update to the Unicode data files.
736 SpecialCasing.txt contains additional informative case mappings that are either
737 not one-to-one or which are context-sensitive.</p>
738 <h2><a name="Property Invariants"></a>Property Invariants</h2>
739 <p>Values in UnicodeData.txt are subject to correction as errors are found;
740 however, some characteristics of the categories themselves can be considered
741 invariants. Applications may wish to take these invariants into account when
742 choosing how to implement character properties. The following is a partial list
743 of known invariants for the Unicode Character Database.</p>
744 <h4>Database Fields</h4>
745 <ul>
746 <li>The number of fields in UnicodeData.txt is fixed.</li>
747 <li>The order of the fields is also fixed.
748 <ul>
749 <li>Any additional information about character properties to be added in
750 the future will appear in separate data tables, rather than being added
751 on to the existing table or by subdivision or reinterpretation of
752 existing fields.</li>
753 </ul>
754 </li>
755 </ul>
756 <h4>General Category</h4>
757 <ul>
758 <li>There will never be more than 32 General Category values.
759 <ul>
760 <li>It is very unlikely that the Unicode Technical Committee will
761 subdivide the General Category partition any further, since that can
762 cause implementations to misbehave. Because the General Category is
763 limited to 32 values, 5 bits can be used to represent the information,
764 and a 32-bit integer can be used as a bitmask to represent arbitrary
765 sets of categories.</li>
766 </ul>
767 </li>
768 </ul>
769 <h4>Combining Classes</h4>
770 <ul>
771 <li>Combining classes are limited to the values 0 to 255.
772 <ul>
773 <li>In practice, there are far fewer than 256 values used. Implementations
774 may take advantage of this fact for compression, since only the ordering
775 of the non-zero values matters for the Canonical Reordering Algorithm.
776 It is possible for up to 256 values to be used in the future; however,
777 UTC decisions in the future may restrict the number of values to 128,
778 since this has implementation advantages. [Signed bytes can be used
779 without widening to ints in Java, for example.]</li>
780 </ul>
781 </li>
782 <li>All characters other than those of General Category M* have the combining
783 class 0.
784 <ul>
785 <li>Currently, all characters other than those of General Category Mn have
786 the value 0. However, some characters of General Category Me or Mc may
787 be given non-zero values in the future.</li>
788 <li>The precise values above the value 0 are not invariant--only the
789 relative ordering is considered normative. For example, it is not
790 guaranteed in future versions that the class of U+05B4 will be precisely
791 14.</li>
792 </ul>
793 </li>
794 </ul>
795 <h4>Case</h4>
796 <ul>
797 <li>Characters of type Lu, Lt, or Ll are called <i>cased</i>. All characters
798 with an Upper, Lower, or Titlecase mapping are cased characters.
799 <ul>
800 <li>However, characters with the General Categories of Lu, Ll, or Lt may
801 not always have case mappings, and case mappings may vary by locale.
802 (See http://www.unicode.org/Public/UNIDATA/SpecialCasing.txt).</li>
803 </ul>
804 </li>
805 </ul>
806 <h4>Canonical Decomposition</h4>
807 <ul>
808 <li>Canonical mappings are always in canonical order.</li>
809 <li>Canonical mappings have only the first of a pair possibly further
810 decomposing.</li>
811 <li>Canonical decompositions are &quot;transparent&quot; to other character
812 data:
813 <ul>
814 <li><tt>BIDI(a) = BIDI(principal(canonicalDecomposition(a))</tt></li>
815 <li><tt>Category(a) = Category(principal(canonicalDecomposition(a))</tt></li>
816 <li><tt>CombiningClass(a) =
817 CombiningClass(principal(canonicalDecomposition(a))</tt><br>
818 where principal(a) is the first character not of type Mn, or the first
819 character if all characters are of type Mn.</li>
820 </ul>
821 </li>
822 <li>However, because there are sometimes missing case pairs, and because of
823 some legacy characters, it is only generally true that:
824 <ul>
825 <li><tt>upper(canonicalDecomposition(a)) = canonicalDecomposition(upper(a))</tt></li>
826 <li><tt>lower(canonicalDecomposition(a)) = canonicalDecomposition(lower(a))</tt></li>
827 <li><tt>title(canonicalDecomposition(a)) = canonicalDecomposition(title(a))</tt></li>
828 </ul>
829 </li>
830 </ul>
831 <h2><a name="Modification History"></a>Modification History</h2>
832 <p>This section provides a summary of the changes between update versions of the
833 Unicode Standard.</p>
834 <h3><a
835 href="http://www.unicode.org/unicode/standard/versions/enumeratedversions.html#Unicode 3.0.1">Unicode
836 3.0.1</a></h3>
837 <p>Modifications made for Version 3.0.1 of UnicodeData.txt include:
838 <ul>
839 <li>Added 5- and 6-digit representation of code points past U+FFFF.</li>
840 <li>Added Private Use range definitions for Planes 15 and 16.</li>
841 <li>Minor additions for the 10646 comment field.</li>
842 </ul>
843 <h3><a
844 href="http://www.unicode.org/unicode/standard/versions/enumeratedversions.html#Unicode 3.0.0">Unicode
845 3.0.0</a></h3>
846 <p>Modifications made for Version 3.0.0 of UnicodeData.txt include many new
847 characters and a number of property changes. These are summarized in Appendex D
848 of <em>The Unicode Standard, Version 3.0.</em></p>
849 <h3><a
850 href="http://www.unicode.org/unicode/standard/versions/enumeratedversions.html#Unicode 2.1.9">Unicode
851 2.1.9</a></h3>
852 <p>Modifications made for Version 2.1.9 of UnicodeData.txt include:
853 <ul>
854 <li>Corrected combining class for U+05AE HEBREW ACCENT ZINOR.</li>
855 <li>Corrected combining class for U+20E1 COMBINING LEFT RIGHT ARROW ABOVE</li>
856 <li>Corrected combining class for U+0F35 and U+0F37 to 220.</li>
857 <li>Corrected combining class for U+0F71 to 129.</li>
858 <li>Added a decomposition for U+0F0C TIBETAN MARK DELIMITER TSHEG BSTAR.</li>
859 <li>Added&nbsp; decompositions for several Greek symbol letters:
860 U+03D0..U+03D2, U+03D5, U+03D6, U+03F0..U+03F2.</li>
861 <li>Removed&nbsp; decompositions from the conjoining jamo block:
862 U+1100..U+11F8.</li>
863 <li>Changes to decomposition mappings for some Tibetan vowels for consistency
864 in normalization. (U+0F71, U+0F73, U+0F77, U+0F79, U+0F81)</li>
865 <li>Updated the decomposition mappings for several Vietnamese characters with
866 two diacritics (U+1EAC, U+1EAD, U+1EB6, U+1EB7, U+1EC6, U+1EC7, U+1ED8,
867 U+1ED9), so that the recursive decomposition can be generated directly in
868 canonically reordered form (not a normative change).</li>
869 <li>Updated the decomposition mappings for several Arabic compatibility
870 characters involving shadda (U+FC5E..U+FC62, U+FCF2..U+FCF4), and two Latin
871 characters (U+1E1C, U+1E1D), so that the decompositions are generated
872 directly in canonically reordered form (not a normative change).</li>
873 <li>Changed BIDI category for: U+00A0 NO-BREAK SPACE, U+2007 FIGURE SPACE,
874 U+2028 LINE SEPARATOR.</li>
875 <li>Changed BIDI category for extenders of General Category Lm: U+3005,
876 U+3021..U+3035, U+FF9E, U+FF9F.</li>
877 <li>Changed General Category and BIDI category for the Greek numeral signs:
878 U+0374, U+0375.</li>
879 <li>Corrected General Category for U+FFE8 HALFWIDTH FORMS LIGHT VERTICAL.</li>
880 <li>Added Unicode 1.0 names for many Tibetan characters (informative).</li>
881 </ul>
882 <h3><a
883 href="http://www.unicode.org/unicode/standard/versions/enumeratedversions.html#Unicode 2.1.8">Unicode
884 2.1.8</a></h3>
885 <p>Modifications made for Version 2.1.8 of UnicodeData.txt include:
886 <ul>
887 <li>Added combining class 240 for U+0345 COMBINING GREEK YPOGEGRAMMENI so that
888 decompositions involving iota subscript are derivable directly in
889 canonically reordered form; this also has a bearing on simplification of
890 casing of polytonic Greek.</li>
891 <li>Changes in decompositions related to Greek tonos. These result from the
892 clarification that monotonic Greek &quot;tonos&quot; should be equated with
893 U+0301 COMBINING ACUTE, rather than with U+030D COMBINING VERTICAL LINE
894 ABOVE. (All Greek characters in the Greek block involving &quot;tonos&quot;;
895 some Greek characters in the polytonic Greek in the 1FXX block.)</li>
896 <li>Changed decompositions involving dialytika tonos. (U+0390, U+03B0)</li>
897 <li>Changed ternary decompositions to binary. (U+0CCB, U+FB2C, U+FB2D) These
898 changes simplify normalization.</li>
899 <li>Removed canonical decomposition for Latin Candrabindu. (U+0310)</li>
900 <li>Corrected error in canonical decomposition for U+1FF4.</li>
901 <li>Added compatibility decompositions to clarify collation tables. (U+2100,
902 U+2101, U+2105, U+2106, U+1E9A)</li>
903 <li>A series of general category changes to assist the convergence of of
904 Unicode definition of identifier with ISO TR 10176:
905 <ul>
906 <li>So &gt; Lo: U+0950, U+0AD0, U+0F00, U+0F88..U+0F8B</li>
907 <li>Po &gt; Lo: U+0E2F, U+0EAF, U+3006</li>
908 <li>Lm &gt; Sk: U+309B, U+309C</li>
909 <li>Po &gt; Pc: U+30FB, U+FF65</li>
910 <li>Ps/Pe &gt; Mn: U+0F3E, U+0F3F</li>
911 </ul>
912 </li>
913 <li>A series of bidi property changes for consistency.
914 <ul>
915 <li>L &gt; ET: U+09F2, U+09F3</li>
916 <li>ON &gt; L: U+3007</li>
917 <li>L &gt; ON: U+0F3A..U+0F3D, U+037E, U+0387</li>
918 </ul>
919 </li>
920 <li>Add case mapping: U+01A6 &lt;-&gt; U+0280</li>
921 <li>Updated symmetric swapping value for guillemets: U+00AB, U+00BB, U+2039,
922 U+203A.</li>
923 <li>Changes to combining class values. Most Indic fixed position class
924 non-spacing marks were changed to combining class 0. This fixes some
925 inconsistencies in how canonical reordering would apply to Indic scripts,
926 including Tibetan. Indic interacting top/bottom fixed position classes were
927 merged into single (non-zero) classes as part of this change. Tibetan
928 subjoined consonants are changed from combining class 6 to combining class
929 0. Thai pinthu (U+0E3A) moved to combining class 9. Moved two Devanagari
930 stress marks into generic above and below combining classes (U+0951,
931 U+0952).</li>
932 <li>Corrected placement of semicolon near symmetric swapping field. (U+FA0E,
933 etc., scattered positions to U+FA29)</li>
934 </ul>
935 <h3>Version 2.1.7</h3>
936 <p><i>This version was for internal change tracking only, and never publicly
937 released.</i></p>
938 <h3>Version 2.1.6</h3>
939 <p><i>This version was for internal change tracking only, and never publicly
940 released.</i></p>
941 <h3><a
942 href="http://www.unicode.org/unicode/standard/versions/enumeratedversions.html#Unicode 2.1.5">Unicode
943 2.1.5</a></h3>
944 <p>Modifications made for Version 2.1.5 of UnicodeData.txt include:
945 <ul>
946 <li>Changed decomposition for U+FF9E and U+FF9F so that correct collation
947 weighting will automatically result from the canonical equivalences.</li>
948 <li>Removed canonical decompositions for U+04D4, U+04D5, U+04D8, U+04D9,
949 U+04E0, U+04E1, U+04E8, U+04E9 (the implication being that no canonical
950 equivalence is claimed between these 8 characters and similar Latin
951 letters), and updated 4 canonical decompositions for U+04DB, U+04DC, U+04EA,
952 U+04EB to reflect the implied difference in the base character.</li>
953 <li>Added Pi, and Pf categories and assigned the relevant quotation marks to
954 those categories, based on the Unicode Technical Corrigendum on Quotation
955 Characters.</li>
956 <li>Updating of many bidi properties, following the advice of the ad hoc
957 committee on bidi, and to make the bidi properties of compatibility
958 characters more consistent.</li>
959 <li>Changed category of several Tibetan characters: U+0F3E, U+0F3F,
960 U+0F88..U+0F8B to make them non-combining, reflecting the combined opinion
961 of Tibetan experts.</li>
962 <li>Added case mapping for U+03F2.</li>
963 <li>Corrected case mapping for U+0275.</li>
964 <li>Added titlecase mappings for U+03D0, U+03D1, U+03D5, U+03D6, U+03F0..
965 U+03F2.</li>
966 <li>Corrected compatibility label for U+2121.</li>
967 <li>Add specific entries for all the CJK compatibility ideographs,
968 U+F900..U+FA2D, so the canonical decomposition for each (the URO character
969 it is equivalent to) can be carried in the database.</li>
970 </ul>
971 <h3>Version 2.1.4</h3>
972 <p><i>This version was for internal change tracking only, and never publicly
973 released.</i></p>
974 <h3>Version 2.1.3</h3>
975 <p><i>This version was for internal change tracking only, and never publicly
976 released.</i></p>
977 <h3><a
978 href="http://www.unicode.org/unicode/standard/versions/enumeratedversions.html#Unicode 2.1.2">Unicode
979 2.1.2</a></h3>
980 <p>Modifications made in updating UnicodeData.txt to Version 2.1.2 for the
981 Unicode Standard, Version 2.1 (from Version 2.0) include:
982 <ul>
983 <li>Added two characters (U+20AC and U+FFFC).</li>
984 <li>Amended bidi properties for U+0026, U+002E, U+0040, U+2007.</li>
985 <li>Corrected case mappings for U+018E, U+019F, U+01DD, U+0258, U+0275,
986 U+03C2, U+1E9B.</li>
987 <li>Changed combining order class for U+0F71.</li>
988 <li>Corrected canonical decompositions for U+0F73, U+1FBE.</li>
989 <li>Changed decomposition for U+FB1F from compatibility to canonical.</li>
990 <li>Added compatibility decompositions for U+FBE8, U+FBE9, U+FBF9..U+FBFB.</li>
991 <li>Corrected compatibility decompositions for U+2469, U+246A, U+3358.</li>
992 </ul>
993 <h3>Version 2.1.1</h3>
994 <p><i>This version was for internal change tracking only, and never publicly
995 released.</i></p>
996 <h3><a
997 href="http://www.unicode.org/unicode/standard/versions/enumeratedversions.html#Unicode 2.0.0">Unicode
998 2.0.0</a></h3>
999 <p>The modifications made in updating UnicodeData.txt for the Unicode Standard,
1000 Version 2.0 include:
1001 <ul>
1002 <li>Fixed decompositions with TONOS to use correct NSM: 030D.</li>
1003 <li>Removed old Hangul Syllables; mapping to new characters are in a separate
1004 table.</li>
1005 <li>Marked compatibility decompositions with additional tags.</li>
1006 <li>Changed old tag names for clarity.</li>
1007 <li>Revision of decompositions to use first-level decomposition, instead of
1008 maximal decomposition.</li>
1009 <li>Correction of all known errors in decompositions from earlier versions.</li>
1010 <li>Added control code names (as old Unicode names).</li>
1011 <li>Added Hangul Jamo decompositions.</li>
1012 <li>Added Number category to match properties list in book.</li>
1013 <li>Fixed categories of Koranic Arabic marks.</li>
1014 <li>Fixed categories of precomposed characters to match decomposition where
1015 possible.</li>
1016 <li>Added Hebrew cantillation marks and the Tibetan script.</li>
1017 <li>Added place holders for ranges such as CJK Ideographic Area and the
1018 Private Use Area.</li>
1019 <li>Added categories Me, Sk, Pc, Nl, Cs, Cf, and rectified a number of
1020 mistakes in the database.</li>
1021 </ul>
1023 </body>
1025 </html>