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OML (aka TeX math italic) is a 7-bit TeX encoding developed by Donald E. Knuth.[1] It encodes italic Latin and Greek letters for mathematical formulas and various symbols.[2]

Character set

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OML[2][3]
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 A B C D E F
0x 𝛤 𝛥 𝛩 𝛬 𝛯 𝛱 𝛴 𝛶 𝛷 𝛹 𝛺 𝛼 𝛽 𝛾 𝛿 𝜀
1x 𝜁 𝜂 𝜃 𝜄 𝜅 𝜆 𝜇 𝜈 𝜉 𝜋 𝜌 𝜎 𝜏 𝜐 𝜑 𝜒
2x 𝜓 𝜔 𝜖 𝜗 𝜛 𝜚 𝜍 𝜙 [a] [b]
3x 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 . , < / >
4x 𝜕 𝐴 𝐵 𝐶 𝐷 𝐸 𝐹 𝐺 𝐻 𝐼 𝐽 𝐾 𝐿 𝑀 𝑁 𝑂
5x 𝑃 𝑄 𝑅 𝑆 𝑇 𝑈 𝑉 𝑊 𝑋 𝑌 𝑍
6x 𝑎 𝑏 𝑐 𝑑 𝑒 𝑓 𝑔 𝑖 𝑗 𝑘 𝑙 𝑚 𝑛 𝑜
7x 𝑝 𝑞 𝑟 𝑠 𝑡 𝑢 𝑣 𝑤 𝑥 𝑦 𝑧 𝚤 𝚥 ◌⃗ ◌͡
  1. ^ Private use glyph for hook for left-pointing arrow[1]
  2. ^ Private use glyph for hook for right-pointing arrow[1]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c Knuth, Donald E. (May 1989). The TEXbook (PDF). Computers & Typesetting. Vol. A (Eight printing ed.). p. 430. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2004-09-24. Retrieved 2020-05-01.
  2. ^ a b Cowan, John Woldemar (1996-04-23) [1991]. "Tex Computer Modern Math Italic to Unicode". 0.1. Unicode, Inc. Archived from the original on 2017-07-12. Retrieved 2017-07-12.
  3. ^ Mittelbach, Frank; Fairbairns, Robin; Lemberg, Werner (2016-02-18) [1995]. "LATEX font encodings" (PDF). LATEX3 Project Team. p. 33. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2017-07-10. Retrieved 2017-07-10.

📚 Artikel Terkait di Wikipedia

OMS encoding

like for capital Pi notation, brackets, braces and radicals. OML encoding OT1 encoding Knuth, Donald E. (May 1989). The TEXbook (PDF). Computers & Typesetting

OT1 encoding

OT1 (aka TeX text) is a 7-bit TeX encoding developed by Donald E. Knuth. OML encoding OMS encoding Knuth, Donald E. (May 1989). The TEXbook (PDF). Computers

Character encoding

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ASCII

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Charset detection

Character encoding detection, charset detection, or code page detection is the process of heuristically guessing the character encoding of a series of

ISO/IEC 2022

4 ("Encoding Methods"), section "EUC encoding" Lunde (2008), pp. 253–255, Chapter 4 ("Encoding Methods"), section "EUC versus ISO-2022 encodings". ISO-IR-196

ISO basic Latin alphabet

telecommunications industries in the First World that a non-proprietary method of encoding characters was needed. The International Organization for Standardization

ISO/IEC 8859-9

declare use of ISO-8859-9. However, the WHATWG Encoding Standard, which specifies the character encodings which are permitted in HTML5 and which compliant