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・ Indian Summer (poem)
・ Indian Summer (Stereophonics song)
・ Indian Summer (story)
・ Indian Summer (The Belle Stars song)
・ Indian School, Darsait
・ Indian School, Muscat
・ Indian School, Ras al-Khaimah
・ Indian School, Salalah
・ Indian School, Sohar
・ Indian Science Congress Association
・ Indian Science Writers' Association
・ Indian scimitar babbler
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Indian Script Code for Information Interchange
・ Indian self-determination
・ Indian Self-Determination and Education Assistance Act of 1975
・ Indian settlement
・ Indian settlement in the Philippines
・ Indian Shaker Church
・ Indian Shaker Church (Marysville, Washington)
・ Indian Shaker Church and Gulick Homestead
・ Indian Shield
・ Indian Shores, Florida
・ Indian Shores, Wisconsin
・ Indian shortfin eel
・ Indian Signing System
・ Indian silverbill
・ Indian Singaporean cuisine


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Indian Script Code for Information Interchange : ウィキペディア英語版
Indian Script Code for Information Interchange

Indian Script Code for Information Interchange (ISCII) is a coding scheme for representing various writing systems of India. It encodes the main Indic scripts and a Roman transliteration. The supported scripts are: Assamese, Bengali (Bangla), Devanagari, Gujarati, Gurmukhi, Kannada, Malayalam, Oriya, Tamil, and Telugu. ISCII does not encode the writing systems of India based on Arabic, but its writing system switching codes nonetheless provide for Kashmiri, Sindhi, Urdu, Persian, Pashto and Arabic. The Arabic-based writing systems were subsequently encoded in the PASCII encoding.
The Brahmi-derived writing systems are mostly rather similar in structure, but have different letter shapes. So ISCII encodes letters with the same phonetic value at the same codepoint, overlaying the various scripts. For example, the ISCII codes 0xB3 0xDB represent (). This will be rendered as कि in Devanagari, as ਕਿ in Gurmukhi, and as கி in Tamil. The writing system can be selected in rich text by markup or in plain text by means of the ATR code described below.
One motivation for the use of a single encoding is the idea that it will allow easy transliteration from one writing system to another. However, there are enough incompatibilities that this is not really a practical idea. See (About ISCII ).
ISCII is an 8-bit encoding. The lower 128 codepoints are plain ASCII, the upper 128 codepoints are ISCII-specific. In addition to the codepoints representing characters, ISCII makes use of a codepoint with mnemonic ATR that indicates that the following byte contains one of two kinds of information. One set of values changes the writing system until the next writing system indicator or end-of-line. Another set of values select display modes such as bold and italic. ISCII does not provide a means of indicating the default writing system.
ISCII has not been widely used outside of certain government institutions and has now been rendered largely obsolete by Unicode. Unicode uses a separate block for each Indic writing system, and largely preserves the ISCII layout within each block.
== Codepage layout ==

The following table shows the character set for Devanagari. The code sets for Assamese, Bengali, Gujarati, Gurmukhi, Kannada, Malayalam, Oriya, Tamil, and Telugu are similar, with each Devanagari form replaced by the equivalent form in each writing system. Each character is shown with its decimal code and its Unicode equivalent.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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