Encyclopedia > Table of Unicode characters, 128 to 999
This page meets Wikipedia's criteria for speedy deletion. The given reason is: attempt to correspond
If you disagree with its speedy deletion, please explain why on its talk page or at Wikipedia:Speedy deletions. If this page obviously does not meet the criteria for speedy deletion, or you intend to fix it, please remove this notice, but do not remove this notice from articles that you have created yourself.
Administrators, remember to check if anything links here and the page history (last edit) before deleting.
It is the explicit aim of Unicode to transcend the limitations of traditional character encodings such as those defined by the ISO 8859 standard, which are used in the various countries of the world, but are largely incompatible with each other.
Unicode has been decried as a plot against Asian cultures perpetrated by Westerners with no understanding of the characters as used in Chinese, Korean, and Japanese, in spite of the presence of a majority of experts from all three countries in the Ideographic Rapporteur Group.
Unicode is criticized for failing to allow for older and alternate forms of kanji, which, it is said, complicates the processing of ancient Japanese and uncommon Japanese names, although it follows the recommendations of Japanese scholars of the language and of the Japanese government.
This article shows Unicodecharacters from 128 to 999.
Depending on the fonts installed on your computer and the settings of the browser the number of characters shown correctly may vary.
Note that Unicodecharacters128 to 159 are unused characters, so even if they display something sensible on your browser, they cannot be relied upon to display the same thing--or anything at all--on any other browser, so they should never be used.