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Unicode helper and search utility

Project description

The ucnum program is a command line utility which allows you to convert decimal, octal, hexadecimal, and binary numbers; Unicode character and block names; and HTML/XHTML character entity names and numbers into one another. It can be used as an on-line special character reference for Web authors.

This version is a (blind) reimplementation of the original unum Perl utility by Gisle Aas (https://www.fourmilab.ch/webtools/unum/) in Python. It was written because it will stay up-to-date via Python’s own unicodedata updates. It has a few minor discrepancies:

  1. The octal syntax 077 is not accepted: Use 0o77 instead.

  2. Character information tables also contain the unicode block.

  3. The regular expression flavour is Python’s.

  4. The HTML escapes argument form is not accepted yet (see “TODO”).

  5. Name aliases (e.g. for control characters) are not supported yet.

Arguments

The command line may contain any number of the following forms of I<argument>:

123

Decimal number.

0o371

Octal number preceded by “0o”.

0x1D351

Hexadecimal number preceded by “0x”. Letters may be upper or lower case, but the “x” must be lower case.

0b110101

Binary number.

b=block

Unicode character blocks matching block are listed. The block specification may be a regular expression. For example, “b=greek” lists all Greek character blocks in Unicode.

c=char…

The Unicode character codes for the characters “char…” are printed. If the first character is not a decimal digit and the second not an equal sign, the “c=” may be omitted.

h=entity

List all HTML/XHTML character entities matching entity, which may be a regular expression. Matching is case-insensitive, so “h=alpha” finds both “&Alpha;” and “&alpha;”.

l=block

List all Unicode blocks matching block and all characters within each block; “l=goth” lists the Gothic block and the 32 characters it contains.

n=name

List all Unicode character whose names match name, which may be a regular expression. For example, “n=telephone” finds the five Unicode characters for telephone symbols.

TODO

The following argument form is not yet accepted:

‘&#number;&#xhexnum;…’

List the characters corresponding to the specified HTML/XHTML character entities, which may be given in either decimal or hexadecimal. Note that the “x” in XHTML entities must be lower case. On most Unix-like operating systems, you’ll need to quote the argument so the ampersand, octothorpe, and semicolon aren’t interpreted by the shell.

Output

For number or character arguments, the value(s) are listed in all of the input formats, save binary:

Octal  Decimal   Hex   HTML  Character        Block  Unicode
 0o46       38  0x26  &amp;          &  Basic Latin  AMPERSAND

If the terminal font cannot display the character being listed, the “Character” field will contain whatever default is shown in such circumstances. Control characters are shown as a Python hexadecimal escape.

Unicode blocks are listed as follows:

  Start         End  Unicode Block
 0x2460  -   0x24ff  Enclosed Alphanumerics
0x1d400  -  0x1d7ff  Mathematical Alphanumeric Symbols
0x1f100  -  0x1f1ff  Enclosed Alphanumeric Supplement

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