Brahmic scripts in Unicode
In Unicode, many of the brahmic scripts (or Indic scripts) are encoded. In Unicode, this group of scripts is called East Asian scripts, Southeast Asian scripts and Indic number forms. As of Unicode version 6.0 the following scripts have been encoded:
External links
- Unicode 6.0 Chapter 9: South Asian Scripts-I (PDF) Bengali, Devanagari, Gujarati, Gurmukhi, Kannada, Malayalam, Oriya, Tamil, and Telugu
- Unicode 6.0 Chapter 10: South Asian Scripts-II (PDF) Brahmi, Kaithi, Lepcha, Limbu, Meetei Mayek (Meitei Mayek), Phags-pa, Saurashtra, Sinhala, Syloti Nagri (Sylheti Nagari), and Tibetan
- Unicode 6.0 Chapter 11: Southeast Asian Scripts (PDF) Balinese, Batak, Buginese (Lontara), Buhid, Cham, Hanunoo (Hanunó'o), Javanese, Kayah Li, Khmer, Lao, Myanmar (Burmese), New Tai Lue, Rejang, Sundanese, Tagalog (Baybayin), Tagbanwa, Tai Le, Tai Tham, Tai Viet (Tai Dam), and Thai
- Unicode 6.0 Chapter 15: Symbols (PDF) Common Indic Number Forms
- Unicode Entity Codes for the Devanāgarī Script
- Indic Computing Standardisation Organisation - Google Group, Group Introduction
|
|
Unicode |
|
|
Code points |
|
|
Characters |
|
|
Processing |
|
|
On pairs
of code points |
|
|
Usage |
|
|
Related standards |
|
|
Related topics |
|
|
|
|