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A Brief History of Unicode

alblue
August 09, 2016

A Brief History of Unicode

Taking a look back at where and why Unicode was created, along with some of the historical encodings and data transfers that shows how it builds on a two hundred year old history. Originally presented at Docklands.LJC, video recording at https://www.infoq.com/presentations/unicode-history/

alblue

August 09, 2016
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  1. What is Unicode? • Unicode is an industry standard for

    representing text • Defines a number of code points that map to characters • Not all characters are visible (control characters) • Not all characters are standalone (accents) • Not all code points refer to characters (some are undefined) • Does include all major ideographs from a variety of languages • U+0041 == ‘A’, U+20AC == ‘€’ • Pop quiz: what size are Unicode code points? • 8-bit • 16-bit • 32-bit
  2. Unicode: a 21-bit code point • All characters in Unicode

    are logically 21-bits wide • Not a great format for encoding data in computers! • How did we end up with a 21-bit character set? • To explain that, we have to look backwards in time … • Before Unicode … • Many variations of character sets with different meanings • Single-byte • ISO-8859-1 (CP-1252), ISO-8859-2, … ISO-8859-9 • ASCII, EBCDIC • Multi-byte • ISO-2202-CN, ISO-2202-JP, ISO-2202-KR (CJK)
  3. What does all of this mean? • Character sets and

    code pages assigned meanings • 0x41 = ‘A’ • 0xD0 = ? • ISO-8859-1 = ‘Ð’ • ISO-8859-3 = <missing> • ISO-8859-9 = ‘Ğ’ • EBCDIC = ‘}’ • All based on ASCII (well, except EBCDIC …) • Pop quiz: what size are ASCII code points? • 8-bit • 16-bit • 32-bit
  4. ASCII is a 7-bit code point • Who needs power-of-two?

    • American Standard Code for Information Interchange • Defined to harmonise existing incompatible encodings • ASCII was the Unicode of the telegraph era • First 128 characters of ASCII are same as • Unicode • ISO-8859-1 (aka Latin-1) • CP1252 (Windows) • … • Where did ASCII come from?
  5. ASCII control characters • Many are now obsolete but stem

    from telegraph days • XML disallows control characters other than CR, LF, HT • Some were used for printer control mechanisms • HT/VT – horizontal or vertical tab (^I/^K) • LF/FF – line feed/form feed (^J/^L) • CR – carriage return (^M) • Some are used for notification • BEL – ring the bell (^G is beep in Unix terminals) • Some were used for notification • ACK/NAK/STX/ETX/SYN • ESC/NUL
  6. Telegraphs and teletypes • Telegraphs revolutionised communication • Characters sent

    as an electric encoding of bits • Various encoding supported characters • Needed standardisation … • Teletype printers would print out punched paper tapes • Paper tapes could be optically read • /dev/tty in Unix stands for ‘teletype’ • /dev/ttyS1 stands for ‘teletype on serial port 1’ • Punched cards and tapes were common
  7. Baudot, Murray and ITA2 • Baudot created first fixed length

    5-bit encoding • Also gave name to ‘baud’ as symbols-per-second (not bits) • Became known as ITA1 • Created ~ 1870 • Murray encoding created ~ 1900 • Modified patterns to minimise wear on punches • Defined NUL as 0, introduced CR and LF, Backspace • Evolved to ITA2 ~ 1930
  8. Baudot, Murray and ITA2 • Baudot created first fixed length

    5-bit encoding • Also gave name to ‘baud’ as symbols-per-second (not bits) • Became known as ITA1 • Created ~ 1870 • Murray encoding created ~ 1900 • Modified patterns to minimise wear on punches • Defined NUL as 0, introduced CR and LF, Backspace • Evolved to ITA2 ~ 1930 ← Sprocket drive holes http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baudot_code
  9. Shifting in Baudot code • The astute of you will

    notice 5 bits isn’t enough • 26 letters + 10 digits > 2^5 (32) • This was solved with the idea of a shift • Based on idea of typewriters • Meant that decoding was based on state • Letter mode – Hello World • Figures mode – £3))9 294)
 
 
 

  10. Morse Code • Morse code is a variable length encoding

    • Dots or dashes to represent characters • Initial encoding for radio with human operators • Invented in ~1840 • Practical for humans to hear and decode / send
 
 
 .... . .-.. .-.. --- .-- --- .-. .-.. -.. e H l l o o W r l d
  11. Punched Cards • Punched tape itself was an evolution of

    cards • Each card represented a ‘line’, each column a letter • Created by Herman Hollerith (IBM founder) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Punched_card
  12. Punched Cards • Punched tape itself was an evolution of

    cards • Each card represented a ‘line’, each column a letter • Created by Herman Hollerith (IBM founder) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Punched_card http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silver_certificate_(United_States)
  13. When were punched cards used? • When were punched cards

    first used? • 1960 • 1950 • 1940 • 1930 • 1920 • 1910 • … Jaquard Loom 1800 US Census 1890
  14. Punched cards legacy • Legacy of punched cards still with

    us • Cards were 80 columns wide • Led to early terminals having an 80 col display • Some IDEs and text editors have a wrap at 80 • 8 characters were often used for numbering • Fortran ignored characters in columns 73-80 • Some text editors will wrap /warn after column 72 • Git commit messages should be wrapped at 72
  15. Punched cards and line numbers • Dropping a stack of

    cards was an expensive operation … • Radix sort of columns 73-80 can be used to fix • Or just put a diagonal line through them …
  16. EBCDIC • EBCDIC is the Extended BCD Interchange Code •

    BCD is Binary Coded Decimal, e.g. 0x12 is 12 decimal http://www.columbia.edu/cu/computinghistory/ 0-9 in BCD is 0000..1010
  17. EBCDIC challenges • Not all was well with the EBCDIC

    character set • Rarely used outside of IBM mainframes • Different sort ordering to ASCII • ASCII has 0-9, A-Z, a-z • EBCDIC has a-z, A-Z, 0-9 (and not contiguous; ‘a’-‘z’ != 25) • Created around same time (1963) • IBM’s mainframes had peripherals using punched cards • Easier to translate punched cards into EBCDIC • Mainframes could be switched into ASCII but programs failed • Shares similar control characters to ASCII • Form Feed, Tab, Escape …
  18. Putting history together Morse Code (1840) Baudot Code (1870) Murray/ITA2

    (1900) ASCII (1963) Fortran (1960) ISO-8859-* (1985) Unicode 1.0 (1991) – 16 bit Unicode 2.0 (1996) – 21bit Jacquard Loom (1800) Hollerith Card (1890) EBCDIC (1963) Telegraph Automation Computing
  19. Why a 21 bit code, though? • Unicode 1.x was

    a 16-bit code • Not enough to store everything • Needed to have additional ‘planes’ • Plane 0: “Basic Multilingual Plane” was most of 1.x • Plane 1: “Supplemental Multilingual Plane” added • Emoji • Egyptian Hieroglyphs • Graphics characters such as dominoes and playing cards • Plane 2 .. 16: “Supplementary planes” of various types
  20. Still doesn’t explain 21 bit • To represent additional planes

    requires encoding • Two main Unicode encodings are widely used • UTF-8 • UTF-16 (formerly UCS-2) • Unicode Transformation Format says how to encode point • Logical code point for € is U+20AC • May be written out in different ways • 0x20 0xAC • 0xAC 0x20 • UTF-16 uses 2 octets (16-bits) to represent content • UTF-8 uses octets (bytes/8-bit) to represent content
  21. UTF-16 • UTF-16 uses two octets to represent content •

    Can be ‘big endian’ or ‘little endian’ • 0x20 0xAC is ‘big endian’ • 0xAC 0x20 is ‘little endian’ • Byte Order Mark (BOM 0xFE 0xFF) often written out at front • 0xFE 0xFF – ‘big endian UTF-16 BOM’ – þÿ in ISO-8859-1 • 0xFF 0xFE – ‘little endian UTF-16 BOM’ – ÿþ in ISO-8859-1 • Still only 16 bit – how are planes 1..16 represented? • Surrogate pairs allow encoding 20 bits worth of data in 4 octets • High surrogate pair (10 bits) • Low surrogate pair (10 bits)
  22. But 10 + 10 != 21 … • No, but

    there’s no need to use them for plane 0 (BMP) • So, take away 1 and you have planes 0..15 which is 4 bits • 4 bits + 16 bits (65536 in each plane) = 20 bits • Consider 7 o’clock symbol • U+1F556 (The leading 1 indicates it is in plane 1) • Plane 1 is encoded as 0000 • F5 is 1111 0101 • 56 is 0101 0110 • UTF-16 for U+1F556 is • 110110 0000 1111 01 == 0xD83D • 110111 01 0101 0110 == 0xDD5A
  23. UTF-8 stores 21 bits in 4 octets • UTF-8 is

    a variable length encoding • ASCII bytes (<= 127, <= U+007F) are encoded as one octet • U+0080..U+07FF are encoded as two octets • U+0800..U+FFFF are encoded as three octets • U+10000..U+1FFFFF are encoded as four octets • Single octets • Always start with a 0 • Multi octets • Start with 11 • Continuation octet starts with 10 Designed by Ken Thompson and Rob Pike
  24. UTF-8 examples • U+0041 A • 0x41 • U+1F556 •

    U+1 is 00001 • F5 is 1111 0101 • 56 is 0101 0110 • Encoded as 4 octets 0xF09F9596 • 11110 000 == 0xF0 • 10 01 1111 == 0x9F • 10 0101 01 == 0x95 • 10 010110 == 0x96  is the UTF-8 encoded UTF-16 byte order mark Doesn't make sense Generated by Windows The number of bits in the first part shows number of bytes in code
  25. Flags of all nations • How are flags represented? #$%

    • Extensible way without adding new data • Regional indicator symbols A … Z G B # U+1F1EC U+1F1E7 E U $ U+1F1EA U+1F1FA U S % U+1F1FA U+1F1F8 Symbols replaced with flag as standard font ligatures UTF-8: 0xF09F 87BA F09F 87B8 UTF-16: 0xFE FF D83C DDFA D83C DDF8
  26. Unicode: a 21-bit code point • Expanded from 16 bits

    with 1.x to 21 bits with 2.x • Encodings for UTF-8 provide a way to store 21 bits • Can scan through string to count code points • Octets starting with 0 or 11 are start of character • Octets starting with 10 are continuation characters • Self synchronizing • Encodings for UTF-16 use surrogate pairs • Surrogate pairs can store 20 bits of data • Define plane 0 to not use surrogate pairs and this gives 21 • Evolving over the last 200 years …