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  2. Halfwidth and fullwidth forms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halfwidth_and_fullwidth_forms

    A command prompt with Korean localisation, showing halfwidth and fullwidth characters. In CJK (Chinese, Japanese, and Korean) computing, graphic characters are traditionally classed into fullwidth [a] and halfwidth [b] characters. Unlike monospaced fonts, a halfwidth character occupies half the width of a fullwidth character, hence the name.

  3. Katakana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Katakana

    Half-width equivalents to the usual full-width katakana also exist in Unicode. These are encoded within the Halfwidth and Fullwidth Forms block (U+FF00–U+FFEF) (which also includes full-width forms of Latin characters, for instance), starting at U+FF65 and ending at U+FF9F (characters U+FF61–U+FF64 are half-width punctuation marks). This ...

  4. Halfwidth and Fullwidth Forms (Unicode block) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halfwidth_and_Fullwidth...

    It is the second-to-last block of the Basic Multilingual Plane, followed only by the short Specials block at U+FFF0–FFFF. Its block name in Unicode 1.0 was Halfwidth and Fullwidth Variants. [4] Range U+FF01–FF5E reproduces the characters of ASCII 21 to 7E as fullwidth forms.

  5. Half-width kana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Half-width_kana

    This LED screen at Haiki Station displays シーサイドライナー (Seaside Liner) in half-width katakana. Half-width kana and 2/3-width kana were used from pre-computer era. [3] In the early computer era, ASCII is defined as a 7-bit character set and has room for 128 characters.

  6. List of typographic features - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_typographic_features

    Substitutes uniformly-spaced characters with half-width version Alternate Half Widths: halt: P1 Re-positions full-width glyphs on half-width spaces Third Widths: twid: S1,P1 Substitutes uniformly-spaced character with a version of 1/3 width (punctuation, etc.) Quarter Widths: qwid: S1 Replaces uniformly-spaced glyphs with quarter-width ones ...

  7. Duospaced font - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Duospaced_font

    A duospaced font (also called a duospace font) is a fixed-width font whose letters and characters occupy either of two integer multiples of a specified, fixed horizontal space. Traditionally, this means either a single or double character width, [ 1 ] although the term has also been applied to fonts using fixed character widths with another ...

  8. Katakana (Unicode block) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Katakana_(Unicode_block)

    Rationale for non-Kanji characters proposed by JCS committee, 2000-03-15: ... Kana Extended-B (Unicode block) ... This page was last edited on 9 October 2024, ...

  9. Kana Extended-B - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kana_Extended-B

    Kana Extended-B is a Unicode block containing Taiwanese kana (that is, kana originally created by Japanese linguists to write Taiwanese Hokkien). Block [ edit ]