languages with full unicode support
Joachim Durchholz
jo at durchholz.org
Tue Jul 4 03:22:01 EDT 2006
Oliver Bandel schrieb:
> Matthias Blume wrote:
>
>> Tin Gherdanarra <tinman31337 at gmail.com> writes:
>>
>>
>>> Oliver Bandel wrote:
>>>
>>>> こんいちわ Xah-Lee san ;-)
>>>
>>> Uhm, I'd guess that Xah is Chinese. Be careful
>>> with such things in real life; Koreans might
>>> beat you up for this. Stay alive!
>>
>>
>> And the Japanese might beat him up, too. For butchering their
>> language. :-)
>
> OK, back to ISO-8859-1 :) no one needs so much symbols,
> this is enough: äöüÄÖÜß :)
If you want äöüÄÖÜß, anybody else will want their local characters, too,
and nothing below full Unicode will work.
Just for laughs, here's a list of non-ASCII Latin-based letters in
Unicode (not verified for completeness):
ÀÁÂÃÄÅÆàáâãäåæĀāĂ㥹ǺǻǼǽ
ÇçĆćĈĉĊċČč
ĎďĐđ
ÈÉÊËèéêëĒēĔĕĖėĘęĚě
ĜĝĞğĠġĢģ
ĤĥĦħ
ÌÍÎÏìíîïĨĩĪīĬĭĮįİıIJij
Ĵĵ
Ķķĸ
ĹĺĻļĽĿŀŁł
Ðð
ÑñŃńŅņŇňʼnŊŋ
ÒÓÔÕØòóôöõŌōŎŏÖŐőŒœǾǿ
ŔŕŖŗŘř
ŚśŜŝŞşŠšß
ŢţŤťŦŧ
ÜÙÚÛüùúûŨũŪūŭŮůŰűŲų
Ŵŵ
ÝýÿŶŷŸ
Þþ
ŹźŻżŽž
ƒſ
ISO 8859-1 covers just a fraction of these, so Unicode would indeed be
necessary to allow a program written in one country to compile in
another one.
Regards,
Jo
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