Roadmap to the SMP
Summary
The following table comprises a proportional map of Plane 1, the SMP (Supplementary Multilingual Plane). A description of the presentation conventions used in the table is at the bottom of this page.
Status
This document is informative. Please send corrigenda and other comments to the authors using the online contact form.
The SMP is tentatively mapped out to the following zones.
00010000-000100FF Linear B
00010100-000101CF Ancient numeric systems
000101D0-000107FF Alphabetic and syllabic LTR scripts and sets of symbols
00010800-00010FFF Alphabetic and syllabic RTL scripts
00011000-00011FFF Brahmic scripts
00012000-00012FFF Cuneiform and other ancient scripts
00013000-00015BFF Egyptian and Maya hieroglyphs
00015C00 00015FFF Aztec pictograms
00016000-00016FFF Recently-devised scripts
00017000-0001B5FF Large Asian scripts
0001B600-0001BFFF unassigned
0001C000-0001CDFF Micmac hieroglyphs
0001CE00-0001CFFF Proto-Elamite
0001D000-0001DFFF Notational systems
0001E000-0001EFFF unassigned
0001F000-0001F0FF Game symbols
0001F100-0001F2FF Alphanumeric and ideographic sets
0001F300-0001FFFD unassigned
Presentation conventions
-
Bold text
indicates an allocated (that is, published) character collection.
There is a link to the charts on the Unicode web site.
-
(Bold text between parentheses)
indicates scripts which have been formally accepted by UTC or WG2
for processing toward inclusion in the standard. There is
generally a link to a mature proposal for the script.
-
(Text between parentheses)
indicates scripts for which proposals have been formally submitted
to the UTC or to WG2. There is generally a link to the formal
proposal.
-
¿Text between question marks?
indicates scripts for which detailed proposals have not yet been
written. There may be a link to an exploratory code table.
-
??? in a block indicates that no
suggestion has been made regarding the block allocation.
- Color highlighting is used to indicate blocks
and unassigned ranges which default to right-to-left character
behavior.
- Grey shading is used to indicate ranges of
control characters and noncharacters.
NOTE: When scripts are actually proposed to the UTC or to WG2,
the practice is to "front" them in the zones to which they are
tentatively allocated, and to adjust the block size with regard to
the allocation proposed.
The size and location of the unallocated script blocks are merely
proposals based on the current state of planning. The size and
location of a script may change during final allocation of the
script.
The Roadmap Committee maintains and updates this document as a
service to the Unicode Technical Committee and to ISO/IEC
JTC1/SC2/WG2.