📑 Table of Contents

OMS (aka TeX math symbol) is a 7-bit TeX encoding developed by Donald E. Knuth.[1] It encodes mathematical symbols with variable sizes like for capital Pi notation, brackets, braces and radicals.

Character set

edit
OMS[2]
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 A B C D E F
0x × ÷ ±
1x
2x
3x ◌̸ ◌̍ ¬
4x 𝒜 𝒞 𝒟 𝒢 𝒥 𝒦 𝒩 𝒪
5x 𝒫 𝒬 𝒮 𝒯 𝒰 𝒱 𝒲 𝒳 𝒴 𝒵
6x { }
7x ⨿ §

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ Knuth, Donald E. (May 1989). The TEXbook (PDF). Computers & Typesetting. Vol. A (Eight printing ed.). p. 431. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2004-09-24. Retrieved 2020-05-01.
  2. ^ 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

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

encodings extended existing simple four-bit numeric encoding to include alphabetic and special characters, mapping them easily to punch-card encoding

OML encoding

left-pointing arrow Private use glyph for hook for right-pointing arrow OMS encoding OT1 encoding Knuth, Donald E. (May 1989). The TEXbook (PDF). Computers & Typesetting

ASCII

for American Standard Code for Information Interchange, is a character encoding standard for representing a particular set of 95 (English-language–focused)

OpenMath

that can be referred to by OMS elements in OpenMath Objects. The OpenMath 2 standard does not prescribe a canonical encoding for content dictionaries,

Charset detection

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

Advanced Video Coding

4:0:0 (monochrome) encoding support", Retrieved 2019-06-05. "x264 4:2:2 encoding support", Retrieved 2019-06-05. "x264 4:4:4 encoding support", Retrieved

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