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- Unicode_equivalence abstract "Unicode equivalence is the specification by the Unicode character encoding standard that some sequences of code points represent essentially the same character. This feature was introduced in the standard to allow compatibility with preexisting standard character sets, which often included similar or identical characters.Unicode provides two such notions, canonical equivalence and compatibility:Code point sequences that are defined as canonically equivalent are assumed to have the same appearance and meaning when printed or displayed. For example, the code point U+006E (the Latin lowercase "n") followed by U+0303 (the combining tilde "◌̃") is defined by Unicode to be canonically equivalent to the single code point U+00F1 (the lowercase letter "ñ" of the Spanish alphabet). Therefore, those sequences should be displayed in the same manner, should be treated in the same way by applications such as alphabetizing names or searching, and may be substituted for each other.Sequences that are defined as compatible are assumed to have possibly distinct appearances, but the same meaning in some contexts. Thus, for example, the code point U+FB00 (the typographic ligature "ff") is defined to be compatible — but not canonically equivalent — to the sequence U+0066 U+0066 (two Latin "f" letters). Compatible sequences may be treated the same way in some applications (such as sorting and indexing), but not in others; and may be substituted for each other in some situations, but not in others. Sequences that are canonically equivalent are also compatible, but the opposite is not necessarily true.The standard also defines a text normalization procedure, called Unicode normalization, that replaces equivalent sequences of characters so that any two texts that are equivalent will be reduced to the same sequence of code points, called the normalization form or normal form of the original text. For each of the two equivalence notions, Unicode defines two normal forms, one fully composed (where multiple code points are replaced by single points whenever possible), and one fully decomposed (where single points are split into multiple ones). Each of these four normal forms can be used in text processing.".
- Unicode_equivalence wikiPageExternalLink tr15.
- Unicode_equivalence wikiPageExternalLink normalization.html.
- Unicode_equivalence wikiPageExternalLink charlint.
- Unicode_equivalence wikiPageID "8477071".
- Unicode_equivalence wikiPageRevisionID "588561713".
- Unicode_equivalence hasPhotoCollection Unicode_equivalence.
- Unicode_equivalence subject Category:Unicode_algorithms.
- Unicode_equivalence type Abstraction100002137.
- Unicode_equivalence type Act100030358.
- Unicode_equivalence type Activity100407535.
- Unicode_equivalence type Algorithm105847438.
- Unicode_equivalence type Event100029378.
- Unicode_equivalence type Procedure101023820.
- Unicode_equivalence type PsychologicalFeature100023100.
- Unicode_equivalence type Rule105846932.
- Unicode_equivalence type UnicodeAlgorithms.
- Unicode_equivalence type YagoPermanentlyLocatedEntity.
- Unicode_equivalence comment "Unicode equivalence is the specification by the Unicode character encoding standard that some sequences of code points represent essentially the same character.".
- Unicode_equivalence label "Normalisation Unicode".
- Unicode_equivalence label "Normalisierung (Unicode)".
- Unicode_equivalence label "Unicode equivalence".
- Unicode_equivalence label "Unicode正規化".
- Unicode_equivalence label "Unicode等價性".
- Unicode_equivalence sameAs Normalisierung_(Unicode).
- Unicode_equivalence sameAs Normalisation_Unicode.
- Unicode_equivalence sameAs Unicode正規化.
- Unicode_equivalence sameAs 유니코드_정규화.
- Unicode_equivalence sameAs m.0274wz_.
- Unicode_equivalence sameAs Q250798.
- Unicode_equivalence sameAs Q250798.
- Unicode_equivalence sameAs Unicode_equivalence.
- Unicode_equivalence wasDerivedFrom Unicode_equivalence?oldid=588561713.
- Unicode_equivalence isPrimaryTopicOf Unicode_equivalence.