CJK characters
CJK is a collective term for Chinese, Japanese, and Korean, which constitute the main East Asian languages. The term is used in the field of software and communications internationalization.
The term CJKV means CJK plus Vietnamese, which in the past used
These languages all have a shared characteristic: Their writing systems all completely
or partly use
Although CJK encodings have common character sets, the encodings often used to represent them have been developed separately by different East Asian governments and software companies, and are mutually incompatible. Unicode has attempted, with some controversy, to unify the character sets in a process known as Han unification.
CJK character encodings should consist minimally of Han characters plus language-specific phonetic scripts such as
pinyin,
CJK character encodings include:
- Big5
- EUC-JP
- EUC-KR
- GB18030 (the mandated standard in the People's Republic of China)
GB2312 - ISO 2022-JP
- KS C 5861
- Shift-JIS
- Unicode
The CJK character sets take up the bulk of the Unicode code space. There is much controversy among Japanese experts of Chinese characters about the desirability and technical merit of the Han unification process used to map multiple Chinese and Japanese characters sets into a single set of unified characters.
Chinese and Japanese can be written both left-to-right and top-to-bottom, but is usually considered a left-to-right script when discussing encoding issues.
See also
- Chinese character encoding
- Han unification
- Chinese input methods for computers
- Japanese language and computers
- Korean language and computers
- Variable-width encoding
- Complex Text Layout languages (CTL)
- CJK strokes
- Horizontal and vertical writing in East Asian scripts
Graphics tablet
References
This article was originally based on material from the Free On-line Dictionary of Computing, which is licensed under the GFDL.
- DeFrancis, John. The Chinese Language: Fact and Fantasy. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 1990. ISBN 0-8248-1068-6.
- Hannas, William C. Asia's Orthographic Dilemma. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 1997. ISBN 0-8248-1892-X (paperback); ISBN 0-8248-1842-3 (hardcover).
- Lunde, Ken. CJKV Information Processing. Sebastopol, Calif.: O'Reilly & Associates, 1998. ISBN 1-56592-224-7.
External links
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