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Writing Systems of the World

A Cultural Journey Through Scripts

Each chapter explores a major writing system — its history, cultural significance, how it's encoded in Unicode, and what makes it technically interesting. The National Geographic of Unicode content.

12 chapters · 47.000 palavras · ~188 min de leitura
1

The Latin Alphabet: From Rome to the Internet

The most widely used alphabet on the planet evolved from ancient Etruscan and Roman writing. This chapter traces its journey from stone inscriptions to Unicode's extensive Latin Extended blocks.

~4.000 palavras · ~16 min
2

The Arabic Script: Right-to-Left and Beyond

Arabic is the world's second most widely used writing system, with complex contextual shaping and right-to-left rendering. This chapter explores its beauty, technical challenges, and Unicode implementation.

~4.500 palavras · ~18 min
3

Chinese Characters: 20,000 Years of Writing

CJK characters are the largest single category in Unicode, with tens of thousands of ideographs. This chapter covers the history, the CJK Unification controversy, and the ever-growing Extension blocks.

~5.000 palavras · ~20 min
4

The Korean Hangul: An Alphabet Designed by a King

Hangul was created in 1443 by King Sejong the Great as a scientifically designed alphabet. This chapter explores its brilliant design, jamo composition, syllable blocks, and algorithmic Unicode encoding.

~4.000 palavras · ~16 min
5

Devanagari and the Indic Scripts

The Brahmic script family encompasses dozens of South Asian writing systems. This chapter explores Devanagari's complex conjuncts, the virama mechanism, and the challenges of rendering Indic scripts.

~4.000 palavras · ~16 min
6

Japanese: Three Scripts in One

Japanese uniquely combines three script systems: Hiragana, Katakana, and Kanji. This chapter explores mixed-script usage, fullwidth forms, ruby annotations, and the technical challenges of Japanese text processing.

~4.500 palavras · ~18 min
7

The Greek Alphabet: From Philosophy to Physics

Greek letters have transcended their original writing system to become universal symbols in mathematics, science, and engineering. This chapter covers polytonic vs monotonic Greek, the Coptic extension, and mathematical symbol derivation.

~3.500 palavras · ~14 min
8

Cyrillic: The Script That Spans Continents

Used by over 250 million people across Russia, Eastern Europe, and Central Asia, Cyrillic has many national variations. This chapter explores its linguistic diversity and the security implications of Latin-Cyrillic homoglyphs.

~3.500 palavras · ~14 min
9

Hebrew: Ancient Script in the Digital Age

Hebrew is one of the oldest scripts still in daily use, with unique challenges including right-to-left directionality, cantillation marks, and the distinction between biblical and modern forms.

~3.500 palavras · ~14 min
10

Thai, Khmer, and the Southeast Asian Scripts

Southeast Asian scripts present unique challenges: no word boundaries in Thai, complex stacking in Khmer, and intricate diacritics in Lao. This chapter explores how Unicode handles these writing systems.

~4.000 palavras · ~16 min
11

Ge'ez (Ethiopic): Africa's Ancient Writing System

The Ge'ez script, used for Amharic and Tigrinya, is one of Africa's oldest indigenous writing systems. This chapter explores its unique syllabary structure and how it's encoded in Unicode.

~3.000 palavras · ~12 min
12

The Endangered Scripts: Preserving Languages Through Unicode

Unicode plays a crucial role in language preservation by encoding endangered and minority scripts. This chapter explores Adlam, Osage, Nüshu, and the Script Encoding Initiative's mission.

~3.500 palavras · ~14 min