Unicode (also known as the unicode standard and tus[1][2]) is a character encoding standard maintained by the unicode consortium designed to support the use of text in all of the world's writing. Unicode is a standard character set that numbers and defines characters from the world's different languages, writing systems, and symbols. Unicode (also known as the unicode standard and tus[1][2]) is a character encoding standard maintained by the unicode consortium designed to support the use of text in all of the world's writing.
Everyone in the world should be able to use their own language on phones and computers. It includes letters, numbers, emojis, symbols, and even invisible control characters. As of unicode version 17.0, there are 297,334 assigned characters with code points, covering 172 modern and historical scripts, as well as multiple symbol sets.
Unicode and the unicode logo are registered trademarks of unicode, inc. Unicode is a universal character encoding standard designed to represent text and symbols from all writing systems around the world. It has been adopted by all modern software providers and now allows data. Unicode is a standard system that assigns a unique number, called a code point, to every character.
The unicode standard provides a unique number for every character, no matter what platform, device, application or language.