Private Use Areas: Difference between revisions
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[[Category:Character encoding]] | [[Category:Character encoding]] | ||
[[Category:Typography]] | [[Category:Typography]] | ||
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Latest revision as of 10:11, 7 January 2025
Private Use Areas (PUAs) are specific ranges of code points in the Unicode and ISO/IEC 10646 standards that are reserved for private use. These areas are not assigned any characters by the Unicode Consortium, allowing individuals, organizations, and software developers to define their own characters within these ranges.
Overview[edit]
Private Use Areas are essential for custom character sets, such as proprietary symbols, logos, or specialized glyphs that are not part of the standard Unicode repertoire. Since these code points are not standardized, characters defined in PUAs will not be universally recognized or rendered correctly across different systems unless the same custom definitions are used.
Ranges[edit]
There are three main ranges designated as Private Use Areas in Unicode:
- **Basic Multilingual Plane (BMP)**: U+E000 to U+F8FF
- **Supplementary Private Use Area-A (PUA-A)**: U+F0000 to U+FFFFD
- **Supplementary Private Use Area-B (PUA-B)**: U+100000 to U+10FFFD
Usage[edit]
Private Use Areas are commonly used in various applications, including:
- **Corporate Logos**: Companies may use PUAs to encode their logos or other proprietary symbols.
- **Specialized Glyphs**: Linguists and researchers may define characters for languages or dialects not covered by Unicode.
- **Custom Fonts**: Font designers can include additional glyphs in their fonts using PUAs.
Limitations[edit]
While PUAs offer flexibility, they come with certain limitations:
- **Interoperability**: Characters defined in PUAs are not standardized, leading to potential issues with data exchange and rendering across different systems.
- **Font Dependency**: Proper rendering of PUA characters depends on the availability of the specific font that includes the custom definitions.
Related Concepts[edit]
- Unicode
- ISO/IEC 10646
- Basic Multilingual Plane
- Supplementary Multilingual Plane
- Character encoding
- Glyph