Skip to content

Commit

Permalink
Unicode 16.0 first generated files
Browse files Browse the repository at this point in the history
  • Loading branch information
markusicu committed Sep 19, 2023
1 parent bc9d936 commit 600db78
Show file tree
Hide file tree
Showing 4 changed files with 8 additions and 8 deletions.
4 changes: 2 additions & 2 deletions unicodetools/data/ucd/dev/auxiliary/GraphemeBreakTest.html
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -6,8 +6,8 @@
</style></head>
<body bgcolor='#FFFFFF'>
<h2>Grapheme_Cluster_Break Chart</h2>
<p><b>Unicode Version:</b> 15.1.0</p>
<p><b>Date:</b> 2023-08-07, 15:52:55 GMT</p>
<p><b>Unicode Version:</b> 16.0.0</p>
<p><b>Date:</b> 2023-09-19, 18:50:12 GMT</p>
<p>This page illustrates the application of the Grapheme_Cluster_Break specification. The material here is informative, not normative.</p> <p>The first chart shows where breaks would appear between different sample characters or strings. The sample characters are chosen mechanically to represent the different properties used by the specification.</p><p>Each cell shows the break-status for the position between the character(s) in its row header and the character(s) in its column header. The × symbol indicates no break, while the ÷ symbol indicated a break. The cells with × are also shaded to make it easier to scan the table. For example, in the cell at the intersection of the row headed by “CR” and the column headed by “LF”, there is a × symbol, indicating that there is no break between CR and LF.</p>
<p>After the heavy blue line in the table are additional rows, either with different sample characters or for sequences. Some column headers may be composed, reflecting “treat as” or “ignore” rules.</p>
<p>If your browser handles titles (tooltips), then hovering the mouse over the row header will show a sample character of that type. Hovering over a column header will show the sample character, plus its abbreviated general category and script. Hovering over the intersected cells shows the rule number that produces the break-status. For example, hovering over the cell at the intersection of LVT and T shows ×, with the rule 8.0. Checking below the table, rule 8.0 is “( LVT | T) × T”, which is the one that applies to that case. Note that a rule is invoked only when no lower-numbered rules have applied.</p>
Expand Down
4 changes: 2 additions & 2 deletions unicodetools/data/ucd/dev/auxiliary/LineBreakTest.html
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -6,8 +6,8 @@
</style></head>
<body bgcolor='#FFFFFF'>
<h2>Line_Break Chart</h2>
<p><b>Unicode Version:</b> 15.1.0</p>
<p><b>Date:</b> 2023-08-08, 11:38:14 GMT</p>
<p><b>Unicode Version:</b> 16.0.0</p>
<p><b>Date:</b> 2023-09-19, 18:50:13 GMT</p>
<p>This page illustrates the application of the Line_Break specification. The material here is informative, not normative.</p> <p>The first chart shows where breaks would appear between different sample characters or strings. The sample characters are chosen mechanically to represent the different properties used by the specification.</p><p>Each cell shows the break-status for the position between the character(s) in its row header and the character(s) in its column header. The × symbol indicates no break, while the ÷ symbol indicated a break. The cells with × are also shaded to make it easier to scan the table. For example, in the cell at the intersection of the row headed by “CR” and the column headed by “LF”, there is a × symbol, indicating that there is no break between CR and LF.</p>
<p>Some column headers may be composed, reflecting “treat as” or “ignore” rules.</p>
<p>If your browser handles titles (tooltips), then hovering the mouse over the row header will show a sample character of that type. Hovering over a column header will show the sample character, plus its abbreviated general category and script. Hovering over the intersected cells shows the rule number that produces the break-status. For example, hovering over the cell at the intersection of H3 and JT shows ×, with the rule 26.03. Checking below the table, rule 26.03 is “JT | H3 × JT”, which is the one that applies to that case. Note that a rule is invoked only when no lower-numbered rules have applied.</p>
Expand Down
4 changes: 2 additions & 2 deletions unicodetools/data/ucd/dev/auxiliary/SentenceBreakTest.html
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -6,8 +6,8 @@
</style></head>
<body bgcolor='#FFFFFF'>
<h2>Sentence_Break Chart</h2>
<p><b>Unicode Version:</b> 15.1.0</p>
<p><b>Date:</b> 2023-04-05, 20:41:29 GMT</p>
<p><b>Unicode Version:</b> 16.0.0</p>
<p><b>Date:</b> 2023-09-19, 18:50:40 GMT</p>
<p>This page illustrates the application of the Sentence_Break specification. The material here is informative, not normative.</p> <p>The first chart shows where breaks would appear between different sample characters or strings. The sample characters are chosen mechanically to represent the different properties used by the specification.</p><p>Each cell shows the break-status for the position between the character(s) in its row header and the character(s) in its column header. The × symbol indicates no break, while the ÷ symbol indicated a break. The cells with × are also shaded to make it easier to scan the table. For example, in the cell at the intersection of the row headed by “CR” and the column headed by “LF”, there is a × symbol, indicating that there is no break between CR and LF.</p>
<p>Some column headers may be composed, reflecting “treat as” or “ignore” rules.</p>
<p>If your browser handles titles (tooltips), then hovering the mouse over the row header will show a sample character of that type. Hovering over a column header will show the sample character, plus its abbreviated general category and script. Hovering over the intersected cells shows the rule number that produces the break-status. For example, hovering over the cell at the intersection of ATerm and Close shows ×, with the rule 9.0. Checking below the table, rule 9.0 is “SATerm Close* × ( Close | Sp | ParaSep )”, which is the one that applies to that case. Note that a rule is invoked only when no lower-numbered rules have applied.</p>
Expand Down
4 changes: 2 additions & 2 deletions unicodetools/data/ucd/dev/auxiliary/WordBreakTest.html
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -6,8 +6,8 @@
</style></head>
<body bgcolor='#FFFFFF'>
<h2>Word_Break Chart</h2>
<p><b>Unicode Version:</b> 15.1.0</p>
<p><b>Date:</b> 2023-03-31, 14:30:32 GMT</p>
<p><b>Unicode Version:</b> 16.0.0</p>
<p><b>Date:</b> 2023-09-19, 18:50:43 GMT</p>
<p>This page illustrates the application of the Word_Break specification. The material here is informative, not normative.</p> <p>The first chart shows where breaks would appear between different sample characters or strings. The sample characters are chosen mechanically to represent the different properties used by the specification.</p><p>Each cell shows the break-status for the position between the character(s) in its row header and the character(s) in its column header. The × symbol indicates no break, while the ÷ symbol indicated a break. The cells with × are also shaded to make it easier to scan the table. For example, in the cell at the intersection of the row headed by “CR” and the column headed by “LF”, there is a × symbol, indicating that there is no break between CR and LF.</p>
<p>After the heavy blue line in the table are additional rows, either with different sample characters or for sequences, such as “ALetter MidLetter”. Some column headers may be composed, reflecting “treat as” or “ignore” rules.</p>
<p>If your browser handles titles (tooltips), then hovering the mouse over the row header will show a sample character of that type. Hovering over a column header will show the sample character, plus its abbreviated general category and script. Hovering over the intersected cells shows the rule number that produces the break-status. For example, hovering over the cell at the intersection of ExtendNumLet and ALetter shows ×, with the rule 13.2. Checking below the table, rule 13.2 is “ExtendNumLet × (AHLetter | Numeric | Katakana)”, which is the one that applies to that case. Note that a rule is invoked only when no lower-numbered rules have applied.</p>
Expand Down

0 comments on commit 600db78

Please sign in to comment.