![]() ![]() ![]() But this method is not well-supported in most software, since most Hangul can be encoded with code points in the syllables block. Unicode also supports a compositing encoding system called initial-medial-final encoding (첫가끝 코드 in Korean), which uses separate code points for each jamo (자모, like ㄱ, ㅏ, ㅃ) in a syllable, mainly for old Hangul which is not included in the syllables block. Unicode has 11,172 (not 500) precomposited Hangul syllable code points (starting with 가, 각, 갃, 간 and ending with 힣) in the Hangul Syllables block. ![]() I understand that the 500 or so possible digraphs and trigraphs have been encoded as single unicode blocks, but I would expect that most computer systems would use the 40 individual letters and use a compositing system rather than use unicode encodings.
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