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  2. Wide character - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wide_character

    A wide character refers to the size of the datatype in memory. It does not state how each value in a character set is defined. Those values are instead defined using character sets, with UCS and Unicode simply being two common character sets that encode more characters than an 8-bit wide numeric value (255 total) would allow.

  3. Comparison of programming languages (basic instructions)

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_programming...

    In C and C++ short, long, and long long types are required to be at least 16, 32, and 64 bits wide, respectively, but can be more. The int type is required to be at least as wide as short and at most as wide as long , and is typically the width of the word size on the processor of the machine (i.e. on a 32-bit machine it is often 32 bits wide ...

  4. International Components for Unicode - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_Components...

    ICU 73.2 has improved significant changes for GB18030-2022 compliance support, i.e. for Chinese (that updated Chinese GB18030 Unicode Transformation Format standard is slightly incompatible); has "a modified character conversion table, mapping some GB18030 characters to Unicode characters that were encoded after GB18030-2005" and has a number ...

  5. Wide and narrow data - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wide_and_narrow_data

    The pandas package in Python implements this operation as "melt" function which converts a wide table to a narrow one. The process of converting a narrow table to wide table is generally referred to as "pivoting" in the context of data transformations.

  6. Variable-width encoding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Variable-width_encoding

    Input and display software obviously needs to know about the structure of the multibyte encoding scheme, but other software generally doesn't need to know if a pair of bytes represent two separate characters or just one character. For example, the four character string "I♥NY" is encoded in UTF-8 like this (shown as hexadecimal byte values ...

  7. Module:Convert character width - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Module:Convert_character_width

    The character data used by the module is located at Module:Convert character width/data. Fixes and updates to the data set are welcomed enthusiastically. Fixes and updates to the data set are welcomed enthusiastically.

  8. Comparison of Unicode encodings - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_Unicode...

    For runs 2 + 2 ⁄ 3 per character plus padding to make it a whole number of bytes plus two to start and finish the run 6 2 + 2 ⁄ 3: 2–6 depending on if the byte values need to be escaped 4–6 for characters inherited from GB2312/GBK (e.g. most Chinese characters) 8 for everything else. 2 + 2 ⁄ 3 for characters inherited from GB2312/GBK ...

  9. UTF-16 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UTF-16

    A "character" may use any number of Unicode code points. [21] For instance an emoji flag character takes 8 bytes, since it is "constructed from a pair of Unicode scalar values" [22] (and those values are outside the BMP and require 4 bytes each). UTF-16 in no way assists in "counting characters" or in "measuring the width of a string".