| /freebsd/contrib/spleen/ |
| H A D | ChangeLog | 9 - Add black and white square characters in the 12x24 version 28 - Add base cyrillic (basic alphabet + most used extended) characters (Thanks 52 - Remove C0 control characters range in the 8x16, 16x32, and 32x64 versions 115 - Add 'AE' and 'ae' characters with acute accent 116 - Add 'AE' and 'ae' characters with macron 119 - Add 'A', 'a', 'O', 'o' characters with dot above 120 - Add 'O' and 'o' characters with ogonek 121 - Add 'O' and 'o' characters with ogonek and macron 124 - Shift vertical line and double vertical line characters one pixel 133 - Add single angle quotation mark characters [all …]
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| H A D | README.md | 32 All font sizes contain all ISO/IEC 8859-1 characters (Basic Latin and Latin-1 33 Supplement Unicode block), Latin Extended-A characters, as well as Box Drawing, 38 ASCII characters, the Braille Patterns Unicode block, and light Box Drawing 39 characters. Please also note that there is no OpenType version for this size. 59 ASCII characters for all sizes: 63 ![Spleen - ASCII characters - 5x8][3] 67 ![Spleen - ASCII characters - 6x12][4] 71 ![Spleen - ASCII characters - 8x16][5] 75 ![Spleen - ASCII characters - 12x24][6] 78 ![Spleen - ASCII characters - 16x32][7] [all …]
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| /freebsd/crypto/openssl/doc/man3/ |
| H A D | ASN1_STRING_print_ex.pod | 28 ASN1_STRING_print_ex(). It replaces unprintable characters (other than CR, LF) 43 Various characters can be escaped. If B<ASN1_STRFLGS_ESC_2253> is set the characters 45 characters are escaped. If B<ASN1_STRFLGS_ESC_MSB> is set characters with the 52 using exactly four characters for the hex representation. If it is 32 bits then 53 "\WXXXXXXXX" is used using eight characters of its hex representation. These forms 56 Printable characters are normally escaped using the backslash '\' character. If 58 double quote characters: this is arguably more readable than the backslash 59 notation. Other characters use the "\XX" using exactly two characters of the hex 62 If B<ASN1_STRFLGS_UTF8_CONVERT> is set then characters are converted to UTF8 64 option will correctly display multi byte characters. [all …]
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| H A D | PEM_read_bio_ex.pod | 31 and control characters from the end of each line, so as to be compatible with 34 If PEM_FLAG_ONLY_B64 is set, all characters are required to be valid base64 35 characters (or newlines); non-base64 characters are treated as end of input. 37 If neither PEM_FLAG_EAY_COMPATIBLE or PEM_FLAG_ONLY_B64 is set, control characters
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| H A D | OSSL_PARAM_allocate_from_text.pod | 59 I<value_n> decimal characters, which are decoded, and the resulting 63 hexadecimal characters. 66 I<value_n> hexadecimal characters without the "0x" prefix. 68 If I<value> contains characters that couldn't be decoded as 69 hexadecimal or decimal characters, OSSL_PARAM_allocate_from_text() 85 I<value_n> hexadecimal characters, which are decoded, and the 87 If I<value> contains characters that couldn't be decoded as 88 hexadecimal or decimal characters, OSSL_PARAM_allocate_from_text()
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| /freebsd/share/i18n/csmapper/APPLE/ |
| H A D | SYMBOL%UCS.src | 28 # Unicode 3.2 characters instead of sequences 29 # involving corporate-use characters. Update 40 # instead of single corporate characters, also 86 # Some of these mappings require the use of corporate characters. 91 # Mac OS Symbol character set uses the standard control characters 124 # not, so these are mapped using corporate-zone Unicode characters 129 # encodes only the abstract characters, so one set of these (the 131 # characters (see below). 142 # - Use standard Unicode characters as much as possible, to 145 # characters. [all …]
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| H A D | UCS%SYMBOL.src | 28 # Unicode 3.2 characters instead of sequences 29 # involving corporate-use characters. Update 40 # instead of single corporate characters, also 86 # Some of these mappings require the use of corporate characters. 91 # Mac OS Symbol character set uses the standard control characters 124 # not, so these are mapped using corporate-zone Unicode characters 129 # encodes only the abstract characters, so one set of these (the 131 # characters (see below). 142 # - Use standard Unicode characters as much as possible, to 145 # characters. [all …]
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| H A D | KEYBOARD%UCS.src | 67 # Some of these mappings require the use of corporate characters. 98 # - Use standard Unicode characters as much as possible, to 101 # characters. 103 # Some of the characters in the Mac OS Keyboard character set do not 104 # correspond to distinct, single Unicode characters. To map these 107 # a) If possible, use private use characters in combination with 108 # standard Unicode characters to mark variants of the standard 111 # Apple has defined a block of 32 corporate characters as "transcoding 113 # characters to force them to be treated in a special way for mapping 116 # 2-4 Unicode characters should be treated as a single entity for [all …]
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| H A D | UCS%KEYBOARD.src | 67 # Some of these mappings require the use of corporate characters. 98 # - Use standard Unicode characters as much as possible, to 101 # characters. 103 # Some of the characters in the Mac OS Keyboard character set do not 104 # correspond to distinct, single Unicode characters. To map these 107 # a) If possible, use private use characters in combination with 108 # standard Unicode characters to mark variants of the standard 111 # Apple has defined a block of 32 corporate characters as "transcoding 113 # characters to force them to be treated in a special way for mapping 116 # 2-4 Unicode characters should be treated as a single entity for [all …]
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| H A D | THAI%UCS.src | 39 # instead of single corporate characters; see 82 # Some of these mappings require the use of corporate characters. 87 # Mac OS Thai character set uses the standard control characters at 106 # ellipsis), no-break space, and two special characters "word join" 112 # be considered presentation forms only and not characters. In most 117 # characters in the Mac OS Thai encoding. They are mapped using 130 # - Use standard Unicode characters as much as possible, to maximize 132 # avoid having content carried by private-use characters. 134 # To satisfy both goals, we use private use characters to mark variants 136 # characters. [all …]
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| H A D | UCS%THAI.src | 39 # instead of single corporate characters; see 82 # Some of these mappings require the use of corporate characters. 87 # Mac OS Thai character set uses the standard control characters at 106 # ellipsis), no-break space, and two special characters "word join" 112 # be considered presentation forms only and not characters. In most 117 # characters in the Mac OS Thai encoding. They are mapped using 130 # - Use standard Unicode characters as much as possible, to maximize 132 # avoid having content carried by private-use characters. 134 # To satisfy both goals, we use private use characters to mark variants 136 # characters. [all …]
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| H A D | HEBREW%UCS.src | 75 # Unicode characters are used here. A single Unicode character 82 # Some of these mappings require the use of corporate characters. 87 # Mac OS Hebrew character set uses the standard control characters at 117 # only be used with a limited number of characters, and it is 126 # - Latin characters with diacritics at 0x80 and 0x82-0x9F. However, 136 # SPACE. The glyphs for some of the other punctuation characters 139 # - Four obsolete characters at 0xC2-0xC5 known as canorals (not to 144 # 2. Directional characters and roundtrip fidelity 151 # problems, certain punctuation, symbol, and digit characters have 188 # 1. Matching the direction of Mac OS Hebrew characters [all …]
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| H A D | UCS%ARABIC.src | 85 # Mac OS Arabic character set uses the standard control characters at 99 # also contains several characters needed for Urdu and/or Farsi. 117 # graphic characters: additional Arabic letters for Farsi and Urdu, 121 # characters have right-left directionality, while the ASCII versions 125 # Mac OS Arabic characters 0xEB-0xF2 are non-spacing/combining marks. 127 # 2. Directional characters and roundtrip fidelity 134 # problems, certain punctuation and symbol characters were encoded 160 # 0x2C or period 0x2E, then the characters will be displayed using 161 # European forms (This will happen even if there are neutral characters 216 # 1. Matching the direction of Mac OS Arabic characters [all …]
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| H A D | ARABIC%UCS.src | 85 # Mac OS Arabic character set uses the standard control characters at 99 # also contains several characters needed for Urdu and/or Farsi. 117 # graphic characters: additional Arabic letters for Farsi and Urdu, 121 # characters have right-left directionality, while the ASCII versions 125 # Mac OS Arabic characters 0xEB-0xF2 are non-spacing/combining marks. 127 # 2. Directional characters and roundtrip fidelity 134 # problems, certain punctuation and symbol characters were encoded 160 # 0x2C or period 0x2E, then the characters will be displayed using 161 # European forms (This will happen even if there are neutral characters 216 # 1. Matching the direction of Mac OS Arabic characters [all …]
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| H A D | FARSI%UCS.src | 81 # Mac OS Farsi character set uses the standard control characters at 104 # Mac OS Farsi characters 0xEB-0xF2 are non-spacing/combining marks. 106 # 2. Directional characters and roundtrip fidelity 114 # characters were encoded twice, one with a left-right direction 140 # 0x2C or period 0x2E, then the characters will be displayed using 141 # European forms (This will happen even if there are neutral characters 190 # 1. Matching the direction of Mac OS Farsi characters 197 # characters to a code in the Unicode corporate use zone is 198 # undesirable, since both of the plus sign characters are likely to 201 # The problem is solved with the use of direction override characters [all …]
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| H A D | UCS%FARSI.src | 81 # Mac OS Farsi character set uses the standard control characters at 104 # Mac OS Farsi characters 0xEB-0xF2 are non-spacing/combining marks. 106 # 2. Directional characters and roundtrip fidelity 114 # characters were encoded twice, one with a left-right direction 140 # 0x2C or period 0x2E, then the characters will be displayed using 141 # European forms (This will happen even if there are neutral characters 190 # 1. Matching the direction of Mac OS Farsi characters 197 # characters to a code in the Unicode corporate use zone is 198 # undesirable, since both of the plus sign characters are likely to 201 # The problem is solved with the use of direction override characters [all …]
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| H A D | DINGBATS%UCS.src | 31 # Unicode 3.2 characters. Update URLs, notes. 84 # Some of these mappings require the use of corporate characters. 89 # Mac OS Dingbats character set uses the standard control characters 121 # - The mappings for the following Mac OS Dingbats characters 122 # were changed to use standard Unicode characters added for 127 # - The mappings for the following Mac OS Dingbats characters 128 # were changed from single corporate-zone Unicode characters 129 # to standard Unicode characters: 132 # - The mappings for the following Mac OS Dingbats characters 133 # were changed from single corporate-zone Unicode characters
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| H A D | UCS%DINGBATS.src | 31 # Unicode 3.2 characters. Update URLs, notes. 84 # Some of these mappings require the use of corporate characters. 89 # Mac OS Dingbats character set uses the standard control characters 121 # - The mappings for the following Mac OS Dingbats characters 122 # were changed to use standard Unicode characters added for 127 # - The mappings for the following Mac OS Dingbats characters 128 # were changed from single corporate-zone Unicode characters 129 # to standard Unicode characters: 132 # - The mappings for the following Mac OS Dingbats characters 133 # were changed from single corporate-zone Unicode characters
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| /freebsd/contrib/bsddialog/examples_utility/ |
| H A D | gauge.sh | 12 characters="A B C D E F G" 13 total=`echo $characters | awk '{print split($0, a)}'` 15 for c in $characters
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| /freebsd/contrib/libxo/ |
| H A D | README.md | 18 "{:characters/%7ju/%ju}{d:filename/%s}\n", 34 <characters>1140</characters> 45 "characters": 1140 57 <div class="data" data-tag="characters"> 1140</div>
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| /freebsd/crypto/heimdal/lib/wind/ |
| H A D | CompositionExclusions-3.2.0.txt | 4 # This file lists the characters from the UAX #15 Composition Exclusion Table. 15 # This list of characters cannot be derived from the UnicodeData file. 89 # (2) Post Composition Version precomposed characters 90 # These characters cannot be derived solely from the UnicodeData.txt file 113 # These characters can be derived from the UnicodeData file 114 # by including all characters whose canonical decomposition 116 # These characters are simply quoted here for reference. 163 # These characters can be derived from the UnicodeData file 164 # by including all characters whose canonical decomposition consists 165 # of a sequence of characters, the first of which has a non-zero [all …]
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| /freebsd/crypto/krb5/src/lib/krb5/unicode/ |
| H A D | CompositionExclusions.txt | 4 # This file lists the characters from the UAX #15 Composition Exclusion Table. 15 # This list of characters cannot be derived from the UnicodeData file. 89 # (2) Post Composition Version precomposed characters 90 # These characters cannot be derived solely from the UnicodeData.txt file 113 # These characters can be derived from the UnicodeData file 114 # by including all characters whose canonical decomposition 116 # These characters are simply quoted here for reference. 163 # These characters can be derived from the UnicodeData file 164 # by including all characters whose canonical decomposition consists 165 # of a sequence of characters, the first of which has a non-zero [all …]
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| /freebsd/crypto/openssl/doc/man1/ |
| H A D | openssl-namedisplay-options.pod | 61 Escape the "special" characters in a field, as required by RFC 2253. 62 That is, any of the characters C<,+"E<lt>E<gt>;>, C<#> at the beginning of 67 Escape the "special" characters in a field as required by RFC 2254 in a field. 72 Escape non-printable ASCII characters, codes less than 0x20 (space) 78 Escape any characters with the most significant bit set, that is with 83 Escapes some characters by surrounding the entire string with quotation 85 Without this option, individual special characters are preceded with 93 characters. 94 If this option is not set, then multibyte characters larger than 0xFF 100 This option does not attempt to interpret multibyte characters in any [all …]
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| /freebsd/contrib/libxo/doc/ |
| H A D | intro.rst | 14 "{:characters/%7ju} {d:filename/%s}\n", 31 <characters>1140</characters> 42 "characters": 1140, 55 <div class="data" data-tag="characters"> 1140</div>
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| /freebsd/contrib/pam_modules/pam_passwdqc/ |
| H A D | README | 28 N0 is used for passwords consisting of characters from one character 30 upper-case letters, and other characters. There's also the special 31 class for non-ASCII characters which couldn't be classified, but are 34 N1 is used for passwords consisting of characters from two character 40 N3 and N4 are used for passwords consisting of characters from three 48 contain enough different characters for the character classes and 57 The value 8 is treated specially. Passwords longer than 8 characters 58 will not be rejected, but will be truncated to 8 characters for the
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