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The upper part of the character set has only the Arabic letters, Arabic punctuation that is different from Latin punctuation, plus few other characters. ASMO 708 was designed in close cooperation [9] with ECMA, which adopted it as its own ECMA-114 standard in 1986. It was also approved as an ISO standard as ISO 8859-6. [10]
The Arabic Extended-B and Arabic Extended-A ranges encode additional Qur'anic annotations and letter variants used for various non-Arabic languages. The Arabic Presentation Forms-A range encodes contextual forms and ligatures of letter variants needed for Persian, Urdu, Sindhi and Central Asian languages.
Constable, Peter (2016-10-28), Script property of Arabic Letter Mark and interaction with digit substitution mechanisms L2/17-016 Moore, Lisa (2017-02-08), "Consensus 150-C24", UTC #150 Minutes , Change the Script property of U+061C from Common to Arabic, and change Script_Extensions from Default to Arabic, Syriac, and Thaana, for Unicode 10.0.
The Standard Arabic Technical Transliteration System, commonly referred to by its acronym SATTS, is a system for writing and transmitting Arabic language text using the one-for-one substitution of ASCII-range characters for the letters of the Arabic alphabet. Unlike more common systems for transliterating Arabic, SATTS does not provide the ...
This code page is neither compatible with ISO-8859-6 nor the MacArabic encoding. Windows-1256 encodes every abstract single letter of the basic Arabic alphabet, not every concrete visual form of isolated, initial, medial, final or ligatured letter shape variants (i.e. it encodes characters, not glyphs). The Arabic letters in the C0-FF range are ...
Latin Capital Letter C with acute: 0198 U+0107 ć 263 ć Latin Small Letter C with acute 0199 U+0108 Ĉ 264 Ĉ Latin Capital Letter C with circumflex: 0200 U+0109 ĉ 265 ĉ Latin Small Letter C with circumflex 0201 U+010A Ċ 266 Ċ Latin Capital Letter C with dot above: 0202 U+010B ċ 267 ċ Latin Small Letter C with dot ...
The right-to-left mark (RLM) is a non-printing character used in the computerized typesetting of bi-directional text containing a mix of left-to-right scripts (such as Latin and Cyrillic) and right-to-left scripts (such as Arabic, Persian, Syriac, and Hebrew).
Code page 864 (CCSID 864) [2] (also known as CP 864, IBM 00864) is a code page used to write Arabic in Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, and Syria. [3] CCSID 17248 is the euro currency update of code page/CCSID 864. [4] The euro sign was assigned to the previously undefined code point A7 hex in 1999. [3]