ArmSCII

ArmSCII

ARMSCII or ArmSCII is the acronym of the Armenian Standard Code for Information Interchange. It refers to several single-byte character encodings defined by Armenian national standard 166-97.

However these encodings are not widely used because the standard was published one year after the publication of international standard ISO 10585 that defined another 7-bit encoding, from which the encoding and mapping to the UCS (Universal Coded Character Set, as defined in the international ISO 10646-1 and Unicode 1.1 standards) were also derived a few years after, and there was a lack of support in the computer industry for adding ArmSCII.

The encodings defined in the ArmSCII standard

Very few systems support these encodings. Windows does not support them for example. It is usually better to use Unicode for proper interchange of Armenian text for web browsers and email, since most modern computers do not support ARMSCII by default.

The following three main variants are defined:
* ArmSCII-7 defined in AST 34.005 is an 7-bit encoding, not containing Latin characters.
* ArmSCII-8 defined in AST 34.002 is an 8 bit encoding and a superset of ASCII.
* ArmSCII-8A defined in AST 34.002 is an alternate 8 bit encoding and also a superset of ASCII.

Note that each ArmSCII encoding also has several minor variants, depending on the revision of the related Armenian standard (which was not made official before 1997, and was defined informally before that; this has caused various confusions and the mappings described below are just best practices according to the latest 1997 revision of the Armenian standard), that may change the exact mapping and usage of a few punctuation characters and symbols.

None of the ArmSCII encodings have reached international approval (unlike the ISO 10585 standard, despite of the critics sent by the official Armenian standard body to ISO/DIS JTC 1/SC 2/WG 2, working on single byte coded character sets) because all international efforts have been made since then to work with the UCS (in Unicode and ISO 10646).

ArmSCII-8 is intended for use on Unix and Windows systems, and for information interchange on the WWW and by email. However Microsoft wanted users to use Unicode and not introduce a pleathora of new code pages, so it is not supported natively on Windows. It just consists in remapping ArmSCII-7 in the higher range above the standard US ASCII range.

ArmSCII-8A is intended for use on DOS and Mac systems. It is a rearrangement of ArmSCII-8, to work with existing DOS and Mac code that reserve a range of code values for characters not intended for text but for presentation layout, using modified fonts; it is however considered as a "hack" of the code pages over which it is applied, as neither DOS (or Windows in the "OEM" compatibility code page used by the text-only console) nor MacOS has ever supported this encoding natively, notably in their filesystem (but this is also true for the now deprecated ISO 10585 standard). However, this encoding cannot map all the punctuation characters normally needed for Armenian, so the missing characters must be approximated using fallbacks to ASCII punctuation (some Armenian fonts may display these ASCII punctuation using the rendering intended for the Armenian characters that are mapped to them by these fallbacks).

ArmSCII-7

In this table, code value 20 is the regular SPACE character, and code value DC is the eternity sign, which has no designated codepoint in Unicode. Some mappings incorrectly claim that it has a codepoint of U+0530. This is incorrect, as that codepoint has not been allocated.

Code values 00–1F, 7F, and B0–DB are not assigned to characters by AST 34.002, though they may be the same as those used in a legacy DOS/OEM codepage 437 (box drawing characters) or Macintosh Roman.

Note that the characters encoded at code values DD and FE (Armenian hyphen and apostrophe) may not be visible with all fonts supporting Armenian.

Support for the Armenian script in other standards

ISO 10585:1996

For comparison, this is the 7-bit encoding in the international standard ISO/IEC 10585 standard that was used before the revision in the Armenian standard AST34.002:1997 (ArmSCII-8).

In this standard (as well as in ISO/IEC 10646 and Unicode), there's only one Armenian apostrophe modifier letter encoded at 0x49 when Armenian uses two modifier letter apostrophes which are cased (U+055A represents the capital apostrophe but is not considered dual-cased in Unicode and this ISO 15985 standard, the small letter apostrophe is absent but generally represented by the ASCII apostrophe U+0027 in Unicode documents).

The left half-ring punctuation (a modifier letter) and the eternity symbol are also missing, and only one double quotation mark (U+2033) is encoded in code value 7A instead of double guillemots in the three ArmSCII variants.

However, this standard maps the Armenian full stop (whose glyph looks very close to the ASCII colon) in code value 4C and the Armenian abbreviation mark (that looks very similar to an angular grave accent) in code value 4F, that are both missing from all ArmSCII code charts.

Note that the characters encoded at code values 49 and 4A (Armenian apostrophe and hyphen) may not be visible with all fonts supporting Armenian.

ISO/IEC 10646-1 and Unicode

For comparison, this is the Unicode code points charts for Armenian.

Its encoding since Unicode 1.1 (except the Armenian hyphen U+058A, the last character added since Unicode 3.0) was based on the previous ISO 10585 7-bit international encoding standard, rather than on ArmsCII that was missing a dozen of characters present in ISO 10585; however non-letters were reorganized by type, and some extensions have been added for rare Armenian characters that were missing in all past 7-bit and 8-bit standards.

Capital letters are encoded in the first half of the block (terminated by modifier letters).

Lowercase letters are encoded in the second half of the block (terminated by Armenian punctuation signs).

Unlike the ArmSCII encodings, this encoding is stable and portable across systems, and contain all characters needed for Armenian (with the exception of the Armenian eternity sign). Some Unicode-encoded fonts for Armenian are mapping the eternity sign at code point U+0530. This is incorrect, as that code point has not been allocated.

However no distinction is kept for the Armenian (mirrored) parenthesis, so the standard ASCII/Unicode punctuation must be used according to their usual rendering. The left half-ring mark (modifier letter) is encoded here, and some other marks are unified with other scripts (notably the quotation marks, middle dot and dashes).

Note that the characters encoded at code points U+055A and U+058A (Armenian apostrophe and hyphen, like in the charts for ArmsCII and ISO 10585), and as well as U+0559 (the modifier mark for numeric, added specifically into ISO 10646-1 and Unicode), may not be visible with all fonts supporting Armenian.

As of today, the Armenian eternity symbol (present only in ArmSCII) is still not encoded in ISO 10646-1 and Unicode (some existing Unicode-encoded fonts may map the symbol on U+0530, but this is not conforming as this code point is still not formally encoded).

Code mappings and classification

Note that some transcodings are shown below between parentheses. They are only approximation fallbacks but do not map exactly the intended character.

See also

External references

* [ArmSCII] Armenian Standard Code for Information Interchange -- Center of Humane Technologies "Armenian Computer", June 1991.
* [AST 34.001-97] Information Technologies -- Character Set And Information Encoding: Character Set -- State Standardization Committee of the Republic of Armenia, July 1997.
* [ArmSCII Version 2] Armenian Standard Code for Information Interchange, Version 2 -- ArmSCII Working Group, May 1999.

External links

* [http://www.freenet.am/armscii/ http://www.freenet.am/armscii/] basic information and utilities to support the ArmSCII standard

Related articles

* Armenian alphabet
* Armenian language
* Romanization of Armenian (including ISO 9985 standard)
* Traditional Armenian orthography
* Reformed Armenian orthography
* Armenian calendar
* (646, 9985, 10585 and 10646-1)


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