Enclosed Alphanumerics Explained

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Rangeend:24FF
Script1:Common
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Note:[1] [2]

Enclosed Alphanumerics is a Unicode block of typographical symbols of an alphanumeric within a circle, a bracket or other not-closed enclosure, or ending in a full stop.

It is currently fully allocated. Within the Basic Multilingual Plane, a few additional enclosed numerals are in the Dingbats and the Enclosed CJK Letters and Months blocks. There is also a block with more of these characters in the Supplementary Multilingual Plane named Enclosed Alphanumeric Supplement (U+1F100 - U+1F1FF), as of Unicode 6.0.

Purpose

Many of these characters were originally intended for use as bullets for lists.[3] The parenthesized forms are historically based on typewriter approximations of the circled versions.[3] Although these roles have been supplanted by styles and other markup in "rich text" contexts, the characters are included in the Unicode standard "for interoperability with the legacy East Asian character sets and for the occasional text context where such symbols otherwise occur."[3] The Unicode Standard considers these characters to be distinct from characters which are similar in form but specialized in purpose, such as the circled C, P or R characters which are defined as copyright and trademark symbols or the circled a used for an at sign.[3]

A circled s (Ⓢ) was used in documents circa 1900 printed by German missionaries, especially the Basel Mission, in the Malayalam language to denote a ditto mark.[4]

Block

Emoji

The Enclosed Alphanumerics block contains one emoji:U+24C2, the enclosed M used as a symbol for mask works.[5] [6]

It defaults to a text presentation and has two standardized variants defined to specify text presentation (U+FE0E VS15) or emoji-style (U+FE0F VS16).[7]

Emoji variation sequences
U+ 24C2
base code point
base+VS15 (text)
base+VS16 (emoji)

History

The following Unicode-related documents record the purpose and process of defining specific characters in the Enclosed Alphanumerics block:

See also

References

  1. Web site: Unicode character database. The Unicode Standard. 2023-07-26.
  2. Web site: Enumerated Versions of The Unicode Standard. The Unicode Standard. 2023-07-26.
  3. The Unicode Standard, 6.0.1
  4. Book: Joseph Muliyil. M Krishnan. The New Malayalam Reader. 1904. Basel Mission Book and Tract Repository. Mangalore. vii. ml. Contents.
  5. Web site: UTR #51: Unicode Emoji. Unicode Consortium. 2023-09-05.
  6. Web site: UCD: Emoji Data for UTR #51. Unicode Consortium. 2023-02-01.
  7. Web site: UTS #51 Emoji Variation Sequences . The Unicode Consortium.