Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q3512806> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 16 of
16
with 100 triples per page.
- Q3512806 subject Q6988745.
- Q3512806 abstract "In Unicode, a block is defined as one contiguous range of code points. Blocks are named uniquely and have no overlap. They have a starting code point of the form nnn0 and an ending code point of the form nnnF. A block explicitly can include code points that are unassigned and non-characters. Code points not belonging to any of the named blocks, e.g. in the unassigned planes 3–13, have the value block="No_block". Conversely, every assigned code point has a property "Block name", which names in which block the character is. This is determined by the code point only, although a block name will have a descriptive nature: "Tibetan" or "Supplemental Arrows-A". All assigned code points have a single block name. Subdivisions, such as "Chess symbols" in the block Miscellaneous symbols, are not a "block". The subgroup name is an informative editorial addition only.The number of code points in a Unicode block is a multiple of 16. Unicode blocks range in size from the minimum of 16 to a maximum of 65,536 code points.Unicode 8.0 defines 262 blocks: 160 in plane 0, the Basic Multilingual Plane (BMP) 93 in plane 1, the Supplementary Multilingual Plane (SMP) 5 in plane 2, the Supplementary Ideographic Plane (SIP) 2 in plane 14 (E in hexadecimal), the Supplementary Special-purpose Plane (SSP) One each in planes 15 (Fhex) and 16 (10hex), called Supplementary Private Use Area-A and -B".
- Q3512806 wikiPageExternalLink www.unicode.org.
- Q3512806 wikiPageWikiLink Q10853148.
- Q3512806 wikiPageWikiLink Q1105784.
- Q3512806 wikiPageWikiLink Q180699.
- Q3512806 wikiPageWikiLink Q1853267.
- Q3512806 wikiPageWikiLink Q185837.
- Q3512806 wikiPageWikiLink Q3297601.
- Q3512806 wikiPageWikiLink Q6988745.
- Q3512806 wikiPageWikiLink Q7439210.
- Q3512806 wikiPageWikiLink Q82828.
- Q3512806 wikiPageWikiLink Q8819.
- Q3512806 comment "In Unicode, a block is defined as one contiguous range of code points. Blocks are named uniquely and have no overlap. They have a starting code point of the form nnn0 and an ending code point of the form nnnF. A block explicitly can include code points that are unassigned and non-characters. Code points not belonging to any of the named blocks, e.g. in the unassigned planes 3–13, have the value block="No_block".".
- Q3512806 label "Unicode block".
- Q3512806 homepage www.unicode.org.