config root man

Current Path : /usr/src/share/i18n/csmapper/APPLE/

FreeBSD hs32.drive.ne.jp 9.1-RELEASE FreeBSD 9.1-RELEASE #1: Wed Jan 14 12:18:08 JST 2015 root@hs32.drive.ne.jp:/sys/amd64/compile/hs32 amd64
Upload File :
Current File : //usr/src/share/i18n/csmapper/APPLE/UCS%GUJARATI.src

# $FreeBSD: release/9.1.0/share/i18n/csmapper/APPLE/UCS%25GUJARATI.src 219019 2011-02-25 00:04:39Z gabor $

TYPE		ROWCOL
NAME		UCS/GUJARATI
SRC_ZONE	0x0000-0xFFFF
OOB_MODE	INVALID
DST_INVALID	0x100
DST_UNIT_BITS	16
#=======================================================================
#   File name:  GUJARATI.TXT
#
#   Contents:   Map (external version) from Mac OS Gujarati
#               encoding to Unicode 2.1 and later.
#
#   Copyright:  (c) 1997-2002, 2005 by Apple Computer, Inc., all rights
#               reserved.
#
#   Contact:    charsets@apple.com
#
#   Changes:
#
#       c02  2005-Apr-05    Update header comments. Matches internal xml
#                           <c1.1> and Text Encoding Converter 2.0.
#      b3,c1 2002-Dec-19    Update URLs. Matches internal utom<b1>.
#       b02  1999-Sep-22    Update contact e-mail address. Matches
#                           internal utom<b1>, ufrm<b1>, and Text
#                           Encoding Converter version 1.5.
#       n02  1998-Feb-05    First version; matches internal utom<n4>,
#                           ufrm<n5>.
#
# Standard header:
# ----------------
#
#   Apple, the Apple logo, and Macintosh are trademarks of Apple
#   Computer, Inc., registered in the United States and other countries.
#   Unicode is a trademark of Unicode Inc. For the sake of brevity,
#   throughout this document, "Macintosh" can be used to refer to
#   Macintosh computers and "Unicode" can be used to refer to the
#   Unicode standard.
#
#   Apple Computer, Inc. ("Apple") makes no warranty or representation,
#   either express or implied, with respect to this document and the
#   included data, its quality, accuracy, or fitness for a particular
#   purpose. In no event will Apple be liable for direct, indirect,
#   special, incidental, or consequential damages resulting from any
#   defect or inaccuracy in this document or the included data.
#
#   These mapping tables and character lists are subject to change.
#   The latest tables should be available from the following:
#
#   <http://www.unicode.org/Public/MAPPINGS/VENDORS/APPLE/>
#
#   For general information about Mac OS encodings and these mapping
#   tables, see the file "README.TXT".
#
# Format:
# -------
#
#   Three tab-separated columns;
#   '#' begins a comment which continues to the end of the line.
#     Column #1 is the Mac OS Gujarati code or code sequence
#       (in hex as 0xNN or 0xNN+0xNN)
#     Column #2 is the corresponding Unicode or Unicode sequence
#       (in hex as 0xNNNN or 0xNNNN+0xNNNN).
#     Column #3 is a comment containing the Unicode name or sequence
#       of names. In some cases an additional comment follows the
#       Unicode name(s).
#
#   The entries are in two sections. The first section is for pairs of
#   Mac OS Gujarati code points that must be mapped in a special way.
#   The second section maps individual code points.
#
#   Within each section, the entries are in Mac OS Gujarati code order.
#
#   Control character mappings are not shown in this table, following
#   the conventions of the standard UTC mapping tables. However, the
#   Mac OS Gujarati character set uses the standard control characters
#   at 0x00-0x1F and 0x7F.
#
# Notes on Mac OS Gujarati:
# -------------------------
#
#   This is a legacy Mac OS encoding; in the Mac OS X Carbon and Cocoa
#   environments, it is only supported via transcoding to and from
#   Unicode.
#
#   Mac OS Gujarati is based on IS 13194:1991 (ISCII-91), with the
#   addition of several punctuation and symbol characters. However,
#   Mac OS Gujarati does not support the ATR (attribute) mechanism of
#   ISCII-91.
#
# 1. ISCII-91 features in Mac OS Gujarati include:
#
#  a) Overloading of nukta
#
#     In addition to using the nukta (0xE9) like a combining dot below,
#     nukta is overloaded to function as a general character modifier.
#     In this role, certain code points followed by 0xE9 are treated as
#     a two-byte code point representing a character which may be
#     rather different than the characters represented by either of
#     the code points alone. For example, the character GUJARATI OM
#     (U+0AD0) is represented in ISCII-91 as candrabindu + nukta.
#
#  b) Explicit halant and soft halant
#
#     A double halant (0xE8 + 0xE8) constitutes an "explicit halant",
#     which will always appear as a halant instead of causing formation
#     of a ligature or half-form consonant.
#
#     Halant followed by nukta (0xE8 + 0xE9) constitutes a "soft
#     halant", which prevents formation of a ligature and instead
#     retains the half-form of the first consonant.
#
#  c) Invisible consonant
#
#     The byte 0xD9 (called INV in ISCII-91) is an invisible consonant:
#     It behaves like a consonant but has no visible appearance. It is
#     intended to be used (often in combination with halant) to display
#     dependent forms in isolation, such as the RA forms or consonant
#     half-forms.
#
#  d) Extensions for Vedic, etc.
#
#     The byte 0xF0 (called EXT in ISCII-91) followed by any byte in
#     the range 0xA1-0xEE constitutes a two-byte code point which can
#     be used to represent additional characters for Vedic (or other
#     extensions); 0xF0 followed by any other byte value constitutes
#     malformed text. Mac OS Gujarati supports this mechanism, but
#     does not currently map any of these two-byte code points to
#     anything.
#
# 2. Mac OS Gujarati additions
#
#   Mac OS Gujarati adds characters using the code points
#   0x80-0x8A and 0x90.
#
# 3. Unused code points
#
#   The following code points are currently unused, and are not shown
#   here: 0x8B-0x8F, 0x91-0xA0, 0xAB, 0xAF, 0xC7, 0xCE, 0xD0, 0xD3,
#   0xE0, 0xE4, 0xEB-0xEF, 0xFB-0xFF. In addition, 0xF0 is not shown
#   here, but it has a special function as described above.
#
# Unicode mapping issues and notes:
# ---------------------------------
#
# 1. Mapping the byte pairs
#
#   If one of the following byte values is encountered when mapping
#   Mac OS Gujarati text - xA1, xAA, xDF, or 0xE8 - then the next
#   byte (if there is one) should be examined. If the next byte is
#   0xE9 - or also 0xE8, if the first byte was 0xE8 - then the byte
#   pair should be mapped using the first section of the mapping
#   table below. Otherwise, each byte should be mapped using the
#   second section of the mapping table below.
#
#   - The Unicode Standard, Version 2.0, specifies how explicit
#     halant and soft halant should be represented in Unicode;
#     these mappings are used below.
#
#   If the byte value 0xF0 is encountered when mapping Mac OS
#   Gujarati text, then the next byte should be examined. If there
#   is no next byte (e.g. 0xF0 at end of buffer), the mapping
#   process should indicate incomplete character. If there is a next
#   byte but it is not in the range 0xA1-0xEE, the mapping process
#   should indicate malformed text. Otherwise, the mapping process
#   should treat the byte pair as a valid two-byte code point with no
#   mapping (e.g. map it to QUESTION MARK, REPLACEMENT CHARACTER,
#   etc.).
#
# 2. Mapping the invisible consonant
#
#   It has been suggested that INV in ISCII-91 should map to ZERO
#   WIDTH NON-JOINER in Unicode. However, this causes problems with
#   roundtrip fidelity: The ISCII-91 sequences 0xE8+0xE8 and 0xE8+0xD9
#   would map to the same sequence of Unicode characters. We have
#   instead mapped INV to LEFT-TO-RIGHT MARK, which avoids these
#   problems.
#
# Details of mapping changes in each version:
# -------------------------------------------
#
##################
BEGIN_MAP
0x0000 - 0x007F = 0x00 -
0x00A9 = 0x88
0x00AE = 0x89
0x00D7 = 0x80
0x0964 = 0xEA
0x0965 = 0x90
0x0A81 = 0xA1
0x0A82 = 0xA2
0x0A83 = 0xA3
0x0A85 = 0xA4
0x0A86 = 0xA5
0x0A87 = 0xA6
0x0A88 = 0xA7
0x0A89 = 0xA8
0x0A8A = 0xA9
0x0A8B = 0xAA
0x0A8D = 0xAE
0x0A8F = 0xAC
0x0A90 = 0xAD
0x0A91 = 0xB2
0x0A93 = 0xB0
0x0A94 = 0xB1
0x0A95 = 0xB3
0x0A96 = 0xB4
0x0A97 = 0xB5
0x0A98 = 0xB6
0x0A99 = 0xB7
0x0A9A = 0xB8
0x0A9B = 0xB9
0x0A9C = 0xBA
0x0A9D = 0xBB
0x0A9E = 0xBC
0x0A9F = 0xBD
0x0AA0 = 0xBE
0x0AA1 = 0xBF
0x0AA2 = 0xC0
0x0AA3 = 0xC1
0x0AA4 = 0xC2
0x0AA5 = 0xC3
0x0AA6 = 0xC4
0x0AA7 = 0xC5
0x0AA8 = 0xC6
0x0AAA = 0xC8
0x0AAB = 0xC9
0x0AAC = 0xCA
0x0AAD = 0xCB
0x0AAE = 0xCC
0x0AAF = 0xCD
0x0AB0 = 0xCF
0x0AB2 = 0xD1
0x0AB3 = 0xD2
0x0AB5 = 0xD4
0x0AB6 = 0xD5
0x0AB7 = 0xD6
0x0AB8 = 0xD7
0x0AB9 = 0xD8
0x0ABC = 0xE9
0x0ABE = 0xDA
0x0ABF = 0xDB
0x0AC0 = 0xDC
0x0AC1 = 0xDD
0x0AC2 = 0xDE
0x0AC3 = 0xDF
#0x0AC4 = 0xDF+0xE9
0x0AC5 = 0xE3
0x0AC7 = 0xE1
0x0AC8 = 0xE2
0x0AC9 = 0xE7
0x0ACB = 0xE5
0x0ACC = 0xE6
0x0ACD = 0xE8
#0x0ACD+0x200C = 0xE8+0xE8
#0x0ACD+0x200D = 0xE8+0xE9
#0x0AD0 = 0xA1+0xE9
#0x0AE0 = 0xAA+0xE9
0x0AE6 = 0xF1
0x0AE7 = 0xF2
0x0AE8 = 0xF3
0x0AE9 = 0xF4
0x0AEA = 0xF5
0x0AEB = 0xF6
0x0AEC = 0xF7
0x0AED = 0xF8
0x0AEE = 0xF9
0x0AEF = 0xFA
0x200E = 0xD9
0x2013 = 0x82
0x2014 = 0x83
0x2018 = 0x84
0x2019 = 0x85
0x2022 = 0x87
0x2026 = 0x86
0x2122 = 0x8A
0x2212 = 0x81
END_MAP

Man Man