📑 Table of Contents

OT1 (aka TeX text) is a 7-bit TeX encoding developed by Donald E. Knuth.[1][2]

Character set

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OT1[2]
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
1x ı ȷ ` ´ ˇ ˘ ˉ ˚ ¸ ß æ œ ø Æ Œ Ø
2x ̷ ! # $ % & ( ) * + , - . /
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 [ ] ˆ ˙
6x a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o
7x p q r s t u v w x y z ˝ ˜ ¨

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Knuth, Donald E. (May 1989). The TEXbook (PDF). Computers & Typesetting. Vol. A (Eight printing ed.). p. 427. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2004-09-24. Retrieved 2020-05-01.
  2. ^ a b Mittelbach, Frank; Fairbairns, Robin; Lemberg, Werner (2016-02-18) [1995]. "LATEX font encodings" (PDF). LATEX3 Project Team. p. 19. 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

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

Ogonek

with ogonek, if it is supported by the font encoding, e.g. \k{a} will typeset ą. (The default LaTeX OT1 encoding does not support it, but the newer T1 one

ASCII

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

Charset detection

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

Code page 951

PC Data KS code, the double byte component of their code page 949, an encoding for the Korean language. See Code page 949 (IBM). The code page number

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