GB 12052

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GB 12052-89, entitled Korean character coded character set for information interchange (Chinese: 信息交换用朝鲜文字编码字符集), is a Korean-language character set standard established by China. It consists of a total of 5,979 characters, and has no relationship nor compatibility with South Korea's KS X 1001 and North Korea's KPS 9566.

Characters[]

Characters in GB 12052 are arranged in a 94×94 grid (as in ISO/IEC 2022), and the two-byte code point of each character is expressed in the qu-wei form, which specifies a row (qu 区) and the position of the character within the row (cell, wei 位).

The rows (numbered from 1 to 94) contain characters as follows:[1][2]

  • 01–09: identical to GB 2312, except 03-04 (¥ in GB 2312, $ in GB 12052)
  • 16–37: modern hangul syllables and jamo, level 1 (2,017 syllables and 51 jamo)
  • 38–52: modern hangul syllables, level 2 (1,356 characters)
  • 53–72: archaic hangul syllables and jamo (1,683 syllables and 96 jamo), and 94 Chinese characters

The rows 10–15 and 73–94 are unassigned.

Errors[]

There are some errors in the standard:[3]

  • 41-64: 믃 in the fold-out table, 믌 in the standard proper – should be 믃
  • 46-65: 틘 in the fold-out table, 퇸 in the standard proper – should be 틘
  • 49-37: 뗸 in the fold-out table, 뎬 in the standard proper – should be 뗸
  • 51-82: 윹 in the fold-out table, 율 in the standard proper – should be 윹
  • 53-67: ᄀᆈ in the fold-out table, missing in the standard proper – should be ᄀᆈ
  • 72-88: missing in the fold-out table, 夞 in the standard proper – should be 夞

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ Lunde, Ken (2009). CJKV Information Processing: Chinese, Japanese, Korean & Vietnamese Computing (2nd ed.). Sebastopol, CA: O'Reilly. pp. 150–151. ISBN 978-0-596-51447-1.
  2. ^ Chung, Jaemin (2014-12-20). "GB 12052-89 to Unicode table".
  3. ^ Chung, Jaemin (2018-01-14). "Errors in GB 12052-89" (PDF).

External links[]

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