Alphabets of Languages with Bidirectional Scripts and Aspects of these Scripts Support
Israel Ervin Gidali - IBM, Globalization Competency Center (GCoC), Israel
Intended Audience: |
Manager, Software Engineer, Systems Analyst, Marketer |
Session Level: |
Beginner |
A multitude of languages have used in the past, or use in the present
scripts which are bidirectional. Phoenician, Aramaic, Old Hebrew
(Canaanite), Jewish (Modern Hebrew, Yiddish, Ladino), Modern Arabic, Farsi,
Urdu, Uigur, Kurdish are only a few to mention.
The total number of people currently speaking languages written in
bidirectional scripts may be well above half a billion people, most of them
located in the Middle East and Asia. Thus one can understand the ever
increasing interest in the writing systems of these languages, their
support in the computer environment, and the inclusion of their characters
in the Unicode repertoire.
The peculiarities of the alphabets and of the bidirectional scripts are
presented, along with the implications related
to their data processing.
|