CS Indic character set
From HandWiki
The CS Indic character set, or the Classical Sanskrit Indic Character Set, is used by LaTeX represent text used in the Romanization of Sanskrit.[1] It is used in fonts, and is based on Code Page 437.[2] Extended versions are the CSX Indic character set and the CSX+ Indic character set.[3][4]
Code page layout
CS Indic[5] | ||||||||||||||||
0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | A | B | C | D | E | F | |
ñ | Ñ | l̃ | ṁ | |||||||||||||
ā | Ā | ī | Ī | ū | Ū | ṛ | Ṛ | ṝ | Ṝ | ḷ | Ḷ | ḹ | Ḹ | ṅ | ||
Ṅ | ṭ | Ṭ | ḍ | Ḍ | ṇ | Ṇ | ś | Ś | ṣ | Ṣ | ṃ | Ṃ | ḥ | Ḥ |
History
The CS and CSX character set was defined during an informal discussion over a beer between John Smith, Dominik Wujastyk and Ronald E. Emmerick during the World Sanskrit Conference in Vienna, 1990. A few months later they were endorsed by several other Indologists including Harry Falk, Richard Lariviere, G. Jan Meulenbeld, Hideaki Nakatani, Muneo Tokunaga, and Michio Yano.[5]
References
- ↑ Anshuman Pandey (December 1998). "Romanized Indix and LaTex". TUGboat (TeX Users Group) 19 (4): 417. http://www.tug.org/TUGboat/Articles/tb19-4/tb61pand.pdf.
- ↑ "CTAN: /Tex-archive/Fonts/CSX/Fonts/Charter". https://ctan.org/tex-archive/fonts/csx/fonts/charter.
- ↑ "Classical Sanskrit eXtended encoding for the representation of Indian languages in Roman script". http://mirror.las.iastate.edu/tex-archive/fonts/utilities/accfonts/CSX.def.
- ↑ "The CSX+ encoding (Classical Sanskrit eXtended Plus) encoding used in (La)TeX". http://sofia.nmsu.edu/~mleisher/Software/csets/CSXPLUS.TXT.
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 Wujastyk, Dominik (1990). "HUMANIST listserv report". https://dhhumanist.org/Archives/Virginia/v04/0661.html.
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CS Indic character set.
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