Graphic character
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In ISO/IEC 646 (commonly known as ASCII) and related standards including ISO 8859 and Unicode, a graphic character is any character intended to be written, printed, or otherwise displayed in a form that can be read by humans. In other words, it is any encoded character that is associated with one or more glyphs.
ISO/IEC 646
In ISO 646, graphic characters are contained in rows 2 through 7 of the code table. However, two of the characters in these rows, namely the space character SP at row 2 column 0 and the delete character DEL (also called the rubout character) at row 7 column 15, require special mention.
The space is considered to be both a graphic character and a control character in ISO 646. It can have a visible form, and also a control function (moving the print head).[1]
The delete character is strictly a control character, not a graphic character. This is true not only in ISO 646, but also in all related[clarification needed] standards including Unicode. However, many modern character sets deviate from ISO 646, and as a result a graphic character might[where?] occupy the position originally reserved for the delete character.
Unicode
In Unicode, Graphic characters are those with General Category Letter, Mark, Number, Punctuation, Symbol or Zs=space. Other code points (General categories Control, Zl=line separator, Zp=paragraph separator) are Format, Control, Private Use, Surrogate, Noncharacter or Reserved (unassigned).[2]
Spacing and non-spacing characters
Most graphic characters are spacing characters, which means that each instance of a spacing character has to occupy some area in a graphic representation. For a teletype or a typewriter this implies moving of the carriage after typing of a character. In the context of text mode display, each spacing character occupies one rectangular character box of equal sizes. Or maybe two adjacent ones, for non-alphabetic characters of East Asian languages. If a text is rendered using proportional fonts, widths of character boxes are not equal, but are positive.
There exists also non-spacing graphic characters. Most of non-spacing characters are modifiers, also called combining characters in Unicode, such as diacritical marks. Although non-spacing graphic characters are uncommon in traditional code pages, there are many such in Unicode. A combining character has its distinct glyph, but it applies to a character box of another character, a spacing one. In some historical systems such as line printers this was implemented as overstrike.
Note that not all modifiers are non-spacing – there exists Spacing Modifier Letters Unicode block.
See also
References
- ^ L.R. Henderson; A.M. Mumford (20 May 2014). The Computer Graphics Metafile: Butterworth Series in Computer Graphics Standards. Elsevier Science. p. 102. ISBN 978-1-4831-4484-9.
- ^ https://www.unicode.org/versions/Unicode5.2.0/ch02.pdf#G25564 Chapter 2, table 2.3