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Unicode Explained
Unicode Explained
ISBN: 059610121X
EAN: 2147483647
Year: 2006
Pages: 139
Authors:
Jukka K. Korpela
BUY ON AMAZON
Unicode Explained
Table of Contents
Unicode Explained
Preface
Part I: Working with Characters
Characters as Data
Section 1.1. Introduction to Characters and Unicode
Section 1.2. What s in a Character?
Section 1.3. Variation of Writing Systems
Section 1.4. Glyphs and Fonts
Section 1.5. Definitions of Character Repertoires
Section 1.6. Numbering Characters
Section 1.7. Encoding Characters as Octet Sequences
Section 1.8. Working with Encodings
Section 1.9. Working with Fonts
Section 1.10. Summaries
Writing Characters
Section 2.1. Method Varieties
Section 2.2. Keyboard Variation and Settings
Section 2.3. Virtual Keyboards
Section 2.4. Program Commands
Section 2.5. Character Maps
Section 2.6. Replacements on the Fly
Section 2.7. Special Techniques
Section 2.8. Escape Sequences
Section 2.9. Specialized Editors
Section 2.10. Exercise
Character Sets and Encodings
Section 3.1. Good Old ASCII
Section 3.2. ISO 8859 Codes
Section 3.3. Windows Latin 1 and Other Windows Codes
Section 3.4. Other 8-bit Codes
Section 3.5. Unicode and UTF-8
Section 3.6. Encodings for East Asian Language
Section 3.7. Converters and Transcoding
Section 3.8. Using Character Codes
Part II: A Systematic Look at Unicode
The Structure of Unicode
Section 4.1. Design Principles
Section 4.2. Versions of Unicode
Section 4.3. Coding Space
Section 4.4. Unicode Terms
Section 4.5. Guide to the Unicode Standard
Section 4.6. Unicode and Fonts
Section 4.7. Criticism of Unicode
Section 4.8. Questions and Answers
Properties of Characters
Section 5.1. Character Classification
Section 5.2. An Overview of Properties
Section 5.3. Compositions and Decompositions
Section 5.4. Normalization
Section 5.5. Case Properties
Section 5.6. Collation and Sorting
Section 5.7. Text Boundaries
Section 5.8. Directionality
Section 5.9. Line-Breaking Properties
Section 5.10. Unicode Conformance Requirements
Section 5.11. Effects on Choosing Characters
Unicode Encodings
Section 6.1. Unicode Encodings in General
Section 6.2. UTF-32 and UCS-4
Section 6.3. UTF-16 and UCS-2
Section 6.4. UTF-8
Section 6.5. Byte Order
Section 6.6. Conversions Between Unicode Encodings
Section 6.7. Other Encodings
Section 6.8. Auto-Detecting the Encoding
Section 6.9. Choosing an Encoding
Part III: Advanced Unicode Topics
Characters and Languages
Section 7.1. Writing Systems and IT
Section 7.2. Character Requirements of Languages
Section 7.3. Transliteration and Transcription
Section 7.4. Language Metadata
Section 7.5. Languages and Fonts
Character Usage
Section 8.1. Basics of Character Usage
Section 8.2. ASCII (Basic Latin)
Section 8.3. Latin-1 Supplement (ISO 8859-1)
Section 8.4. Other Latin Letters
Section 8.5. Other European Alphabetic Scripts
Section 8.6. Diacritic Marks
Section 8.7. Letterlike Symbols
Section 8.8. General Punctuation
Section 8.9. Line Structure Control
Section 8.10. Mathematical and Technical Symbols
Section 8.11. Other Blocks
The Character Level and Above
Section 9.1. Levels of Text Representation and Processing
Section 9.2. Characters and Markup
Section 9.3. Media Types for Text
Characters in Internet Protocols
Section 10.1. Information About Encoding
Section 10.2. Characters in MIME
Section 10.3. Content Negotiation and Multilingual Sites
Section 10.4. Characters in Protocol Headers
Section 10.5. Characters in Domain Names and URLs
Characters in Programming
Section 11.1. Characters in Computer Languages
Section 11.2. Character and String Data
Section 11.3. The Preparedness Principle
Section 11.4. Character Input and Output
Section 11.5. Processing Form Data
Section 11.6. Identifiers, Patterns, and Regular Expressions
Section 11.7. International Components for Unicode (ICU)
Section 11.8. Using Locales
Tables for Writing Characters
Section A.1. Additional Notes
About the Author
Colophon
Index
SYMBOL
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
J
K
L
M
N
O
P
Q
R
S
T
U
V
W
X
Y
Z
Unicode Explained
ISBN: 059610121X
EAN: 2147483647
Year: 2006
Pages: 139
Authors:
Jukka K. Korpela
BUY ON AMAZON
Inside Network Security Assessment: Guarding Your IT Infrastructure
What Security Is and Isnt
Four Ways in Which You Can Respond to Risk
Defining the Scope of the Assessment
Reducing the Risk of an Attack
Appendix D. Dealing with Consultants and Outside Vendors
Building Web Applications with UML (2nd Edition)
Client-Side Risks
UX Modeling with UML
Guidelines for Web Application Design
Overview
Use Case View
Network Security Architectures
References
References
Load Balancing
Secure Network Management and Network Security Management
Tool Capabilities
Competency-Based Human Resource Management
Competency-Based HR Planning
Competency-Based Employee Rewards
Competency-Based HR Management The Next Steps
Appendix B Further Suggestions on Employee Development
Appendix D Employee Development and Succession Management
101 Microsoft Visual Basic .NET Applications
Working with Microsoft Visual Studio .NET 2003 and Microsoft .NET Framework 1.1
Building Web Applications
Working with Console Applications
Working with the .NET Framework
Building Enterprise Services Applications
Understanding Digital Signal Processing (2nd Edition)
Chapter Three. The Discrete Fourier Transform
DFT PROCESSING GAIN
POLYPHASE FILTERS
EXPONENTIAL AVERAGING
Section G.3. MULTISECTION COMPLEX FSF PHASE
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