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Topic: Supplementary Ideographic Plane


  
  Unicode
Plane 1, the Supplementary Multilingual Plane (SMP) is mostly used for historic scripts such as Linear B, but is also used for musical and mathematical symbols.
Plane 2, the Supplementary Ideographic Plane (SIP) is used for about 40000 rare Chinese characters that are mostly historic, although there are some modern ones.
Still most of those ideographs are evidently made up of simpler elements, so in principle it would be possible to decompose them just as it is done with Hangul.
www.sciencedaily.com /encyclopedia/unicode_1   (2221 words)

  
 Roadmap to the SIP
The following table comprises a proportional map of Plane 2, the SIP (Supplementary Ideographic Plane).
Plane 2 is tentatively mapped out to the following zones.
NOTE: Should Plane 2, the SIP (Supplementary Ideographic Plane) prove insufficient for future Han character encoding, it is anticipated that further allocations may be provided on Plane 3.
www.unicode.org /roadmaps/sip   (325 words)

  
 Using Plane 1 Characters
Plane 1 (also known as the Supplementary Multilingual Plane, or SMP) will mainly be used for historical scripts as well as sets of Western and Byzantine musical symbols.
Characters in the supplementary planes are different than characters in the BMP because they are stored in a Unicode font under one hexadecimal number, but in many applications are accessed through the use of surrogate pairs.
Plane 1 characters will not display properly in Windows 98/Me (although if you open a file that contains Plane 1 characters under Win98/Me, it will not be damaged; the Plane 1 characters won’t be visible, but they will still be there if you open the file later under Win2000 or XP).
scholarsfonts.net /Plane1.htm   (2837 words)

  
 Learn more about Unicode in the online encyclopedia.   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-16)
The Unicode code space for characters is divided into 17 "planes" and each plane has 65536 code points.
The first plane (plane 0), the Basic Multilingual Plane (BMP), is where most characters have been assigned, so far.
Plane 1, the Supplementary Multilingual Plane (SMP) is mostly used for historic scripts, e.g.
www.onlineencyclopedia.org /u/un/unicode_1.html   (1786 words)

  
 Production First Software Encyclopedia of Typography and Electronic Communication : S
Supplementary Ideographic Plane or Supplementary Plane for CJK Unified Ideographs This term denotes the third grouping of 65,536 characters, or plane 2, of the ISO/IEC/10646 character set.
This plane is intended to encode all other significant scripts of the world (mostly extinct), except CJKV unified ideographs, additional miscellaneous alphabets, and additional symbols not included in the BMP.
Supplementary Private Use plane or SPUP A plane, such as plane 15 or 16 of ISO/IEC/10646, reserved for private use.
ourworld.compuserve.com /homepages/profirst/s.htm   (7225 words)

  
 SIP article - SIP three letter abbreviation computing IETF Session Initiation - What-Means.com   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-16)
In the context of Unicode, the Supplementary Ideographic Plane (Plane Two).
This is a disambiguation page; that is, one that points to other pages that might otherwise have the same name.
SIP article - SIP definition - what means SIP
www.what-means.com /encyclopedia/SIP   (107 words)

  
 SIP - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In homebuilding, SIP means Structural insulated panels that replace the stick,film san panels used in siding and roofing.
In telecommunications business, SIP was the former name of the Italian Telecommunications company Telecom Italia
This page concerning a three-letter acronym or abbreviation is a disambiguation page — a navigational aid which lists other pages that might otherwise share the same title.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/SIP   (196 words)

  
 High-Logic :: View topic - How to add characters defined in the Supplementary Planes...
All planes contain 16 bits of code points, thus Unicode characters may be encoded at any code point from U+0000 to U+10FFFF.
Plane 1 (0x010000 to 0x01FFFF) is the Supplementary Multilingual Plane (SMP) for scripts and symbols.
Plane 14 (0x0E0000 to 0x0EFFFF) is the Supplementary Special-purpose Plane (SSP)
forum.high-logic.com /viewtopic.php?t=386   (721 words)

  
 CJK Compatibility Ideographs Supplement - Test for Unicode support in Web browsers
The CJK Compatibility Ideographs Supplement range was introduced with version 3.1 of the Unicode Standard, and provides additional characters to those in the main CJK Compatibility Ideographs range.
The CJK Compatibility Ideographs Supplement range is located in Plane 2 (the Supplementary Ideographic Plane), which requires the enabling of surrogates in Windows 2000; these characters cannot easily be displayed in earlier versions of Windows.
The characters that appear in the “Character” columns of the following table depend on the browser that you are using, the fonts installed on your computer, and the browser options you have chosen that determine the fonts used to display particular character sets, encodings or languages.
www.alanwood.net /unicode/cjk_compatibility_ideographs_supplement.html   (244 words)

  
 Mapping of Unicode characters   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-16)
There is much controversy among CJK specialists, particularly Japanese ones, about the desirability and technical merit of the "Han unification" process used to map multiple Chinese and Japanese character sets into a single set of unified characters.
Furthermore, ranges of characters have been tentatively blocked out for every known unencoded script (see http://www.unicode.org/roadmaps/), and while Unicode may need another plane for ideographic characters, there are ten planes that could only be needed if previously unknown scripts with tens of thousands of characters are discovered.
The Basic Multilingual Plane includes a Private Use Area in the range U+E000–U+F8FF (57344–63743), and Plane Fifteen (U+F0000–U+FFFFF) and Plane Sixteen (U+100000–10FFFF) are completely reserved for private use as well.
www.worldhistory.com /wiki/M/Mapping-of-Unicode-characters.htm   (592 words)

  
 Slide0240   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-16)
Recently Unicode and ISO 10646 have defined 16 supplementary planes, each the same size as the BMP, for future expansion.
Some of those planes are being populated already.
Also a large number of additional ideographic characters have been added to the Supplementary Ideographic Plane (SIP).
people.w3.org /rishida/scripts/tutorial/slides/Slide0240.html   (77 words)

  
 BASIC MULTILINGUAL PLANE - Definition   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-16)
(BMP) The first plane defined in Unicode/ISO 10646, designed to include all scripts in active modern use.
The BMP currently includes the Latin, Greek, Cyrillic, Devangari, hiragana, katakana, and Cherokee scripts, among others, and a large body of mathematical, APL-related, and other miscellaneous characters.
Most of the Han ideographs in current use are present in the BMP, but due to the large number of ideographs, many were placed in the Supplementary Ideographic Plane.
www.hyperdictionary.com /dictionary/Basic+Multilingual+Plane   (73 words)

  
 supplementary ideographic plane   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-16)
SIP The third plane plane 2 defined in Unicode/ISO 10646, designed to hold all the ideographs descended from Chinese writing mainly found in Vietnamese, Korean, Japanese and Chinese that aren't found in the Basic Multilingual Plane.
The BMP was supposed to hold all ideographs in modern use; unfortunately, many Chinese dialects like Cantonese and Hong Kong Chinese were overlooked; to write these, characters from the SIP are necessary.
This is one reason even non-academic software must support characters outside the BMP.
www.english-dictionary.us /meaning/Supplementary_Ideographic_Plane.asp   (89 words)

  
 Character Set List
Planes 1 and 2 contained Big5 characters (but not in Big5 order), plane 14 contained user characters.
An eighth plane of about 7000 even more abstruse characters is thought to be under development.
This character set is a double byte 94x94 representation of the Yi script (an ideographic script used in Sichuan, Yunnan, Guizhou and Guangzi).
www.jbrowse.com /text/charsets.html   (9294 words)

  
 supplementary ideographic plane - OneLook Dictionary Search   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-16)
We found one dictionary with English definitions that includes the word supplementary ideographic plane:
Tip: Click on the first link on a line below to go directly to a page where "supplementary ideographic plane" is defined.
Supplementary Ideographic Plane : Free On-line Dictionary of Computing [home, info]
www.onelook.com /?w=supplementary+ideographic+plane   (75 words)

  
 [HACKERS] Three-byte Unicode characters
I'm just doubtful that > the reports we've seen really indicate that we need it, or that adding > it will cut down on the incidence of complaints :-(OK, I got on the IRC server and talked to folks who actually understand this.
They say there are Chinese who are reporting this problem, so I Googled and found this: http://www.yale.edu/chinesemac/pages/charset_encoding.html#Unicode See the paragraph with "Supplementary Ideographic Plane".
You will see that paragraph says: The Supplementary Ideographic Plane (SIP) currently contains 42,711 additional characters in "CJK Unified Ideographs Extension B" (U+20000-2A6D6).
www.mail-archive.com /pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org/msg57332.html   (310 words)

  
 Omnipelagos.com ~ article "SIP"   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-16)
Parliant's PhoneValet, an Asterisk PBX server, IP-based telephony devices, or SIP softphones by Xten Networks, Inc. for use with many VoIP services.
VoIP / Voice over IP, which these days is more SIP than H.323.
The OptiPoint WL2 Professional will be SIP- and CorNet IP-compatible, and resemble a normal phone with a large screen
www.omnipelagos.com /entry?n=sIP   (253 words)

  
 CJK Unified Ideographs Extension B - Test for Unicode support in Web browsers
CJK Unified Ideographs Extension B - Test for Unicode support in Web browsers
The CJK Unified Ideographs Extension B range was introduced with version 3.1 of the Unicode Standard, and provides 42,711 additions to the CJK Unified Ideographs range.
The CJK Unified Ideographs Extension B range is located in Plane 2 (the Supplementary Ideographic Plane), which requires the enabling of surrogates in Windows 2000; these characters cannot easily be displayed in earlier versions of Windows.
www.alanwood.net /unicode/cjk_unified_ideographs_extension_b.html   (359 words)

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