| Oracle® Database Globalization Support Guide 11g Release 2 (11.2) Part Number E10729-07  | 
  | 
  | 
PDF · Mobi · ePub | 
This appendix offers an introduction to Unicode character assignments. This appendix contains these topics:
Table B-1 contains code ranges that have been allocated in Unicode for UTF-16 character codes.
Table B-1 Unicode Character Code Ranges for UTF-16 Character Codes
| Types of Characters | First 16 Bits | Second 16 Bits | 
|---|---|---|
| 
 ASCII  | 
 0000-007F  | 
 -  | 
| 
 European (except ASCII), Arabic, Hebrew  | 
 0080-07FF  | 
 -  | 
| 
 Iindic, Thai, certain symbols (such as the euro symbol), Chinese, Japanese, Korean  | 
 0800-0FFF 1000 - CFFF D000 - D7FF F900 - FFFF  | 
 -  | 
| 
 Private Use Area #1  | 
 E000 - EFFF F000 - F8FF  | 
 -  | 
| 
 Supplementary characters: Additional Chinese, Japanese, and Korean characters; historic characters; musical symbols; mathematical symbols  | 
 D800 - D8BF D8CO - DABF DAC0 - DB7F  | 
 DC00 - DFFF DC00 - DFFF DC00 - DFFF  | 
| 
 Private Use Area #2  | 
 DB80 - DBBF DBC0 - DBFF  | 
 DC00 - DFFF DC00 - DFFF  | 
Table B-2 contains code ranges that have been allocated in Unicode for UTF-8 character codes.
Table B-2 Unicode Character Code Ranges for UTF-8 Character Codes
| Types of Characters | First Byte | Second Byte | Third Byte | Fourth Byte | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 
 ASCII  | 
 00 - 7F  | 
 -  | 
 -  | 
 -  | 
| 
 European (except ASCII), Arabic, Hebrew  | 
 C2 - DF  | 
 80 - BF  | 
 -  | 
 -  | 
| 
 Indic, Thai, certain symbols (such as the euro symbol), Chinese, Japanese, Korean  | 
 E0 E1 - EC ED EF  | 
 A0 - BF 80 - BF 80 - 9F A4 - BF  | 
 80 - BF 80 - BF 80 - BF 80 - BF  | 
 -  | 
| 
 Private Use Area #1  | 
 EE EF  | 
 80 - BF 80 - A3  | 
 80 - BF 80 - BF  | 
 -  | 
| 
 Supplementary characters: Additional Chinese, Japanese, and Korean characters; historic characters; musical symbols; mathematical symbols  | 
 F0 F1 - F2 F3  | 
 90 - BF 80 - BF 80 - AF  | 
 80 - BF 80 - BF 80 - BF  | 
 80 - BF 80 - BF 80 - BF  | 
| 
 Private Use Area #2  | 
 F3 F4  | 
 B0 - BF 80 - 8F  | 
 80 - BF 80 - BF  | 
 80 - BF 80 - BF  | 
Note:
Blank spaces represent nonapplicable code assignments. Character codes are shown in hexadecimal representation.As shown in Table B-1, UTF-16 character codes for some characters (Additional Chinese/Japanese/Korean characters and Private Use Area #2) are represented in two units of 16-bits. These are supplementary characters. A supplementary character consists of two 16-bit values. The first 16-bit value is encoded in the range from 0xD800 to 0xDBFF. The second 16-bit value is encoded in the range from 0xDC00 to 0xDFFF. With supplementary characters, UTF-16 character codes can represent more than one million characters. Without supplementary characters, only 65,536 characters can be represented. The AL16UTF16 character set in Oracle Database supports supplementary characters.
See Also:
"Supplementary Characters"The UTF-8 character codes in Table B-2 show that the following conditions are true:
ASCII characters use 1 byte
European (except ASCII), Arabic, and Hebrew characters require 2 bytes
Indic, Thai, Chinese, Japanese, and Korean characters as well as certain symbols such as the euro symbol require 3 bytes
Characters in the Private Use Area #1 require 3 bytes
Supplementary characters require 4 bytes
Characters in the Private Use Area #2 require 4 bytes
In Oracle Database, the AL32UTF8 character set supports 1-byte, 2-byte, 3-byte, and 4-byte values. In Oracle Database, the UTF8 character set supports 1-byte, 2-byte, and 3-byte values, but not 4-byte values.