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VSCII (Vietnamese Standard Code for Information Interchange), also known as TCVN 5712,[2] ISO-IR-180,[3] .VN,[4] ABC[4] or simply the TCVN encodings,[4][5] is a set of three closely related Vietnamese national standard character encodings for using the Vietnamese language with computers, developed by the TCVN Technical Committee on Information Technology (TCVN/TC1) and first adopted in 1993 (as TCVN 5712:1993).[2]

VSCII
Alias(es)x-viet-tcvn5712[1]
Language(s)Vietnamese, English
Created byTCVN/TC1
StandardTCVN 5712:1993
Classification8-bit SBCS;
Extended ASCII (VSCII-2/-3)

It should not be confused with the similarly-named unofficial VISCII encoding, which was sometimes used by overseas Vietnamese speakers.[4] VISCII was also intended to stand for Vietnamese Standard Code for Information Interchange, but is not related to VSCII.[6]

VSCII (TCVN) was used extensively in the north of Vietnam, while VNI was popular in the south.[4] Unicode and the Windows-1258 code page are now used for virtually all Vietnamese computer data,[citation needed] but legacy files or archived messages may need conversion.

Encodings

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All three forms of VSCII keep the 95 printable characters of ASCII unmodified.

VSCII-3, also known as TCVN 5712-3, VN3 or simply TCVN3,[7] includes the fewest assignments. It is an extended ASCII, because it keeps all 128 codes of ASCII unmodified. It does not reassign any of the C0 and C1 control codes. Compared to ASCII, it adds 75 characters:

  • 67 lowercase characters, allowing full lowercase support.
  • 7 uppercase characters, allowing uppercase support for the 29 base letters without tone marks.
  • The non-breaking space.

Tone marks on uppercase vowels is accomplished in TCVN3 by switching to an all-capital font.[8]

VSCII-2, also known as TCVN 5712-2 and VN2, is a superset of VSCII-3. It is an extended ASCII, because it keeps all 128 codes of ASCII unmodified. It does not reassign any of the C0 and C1 control codes, making it conformant with ISO 2022 as a 96-set.[2][3] Compared to VSCII-3, it adds (for a total of 96 non-ASCII characters):

  • 16 more uppercase characters with pre-composed tone marks (for a total of 23 non-ASCII uppercase characters)
  • 5 combining diacritics for tone marks, allowing other combinations of uppercase letters and tone marks to be represented. Combining marks follow the base letter[2] as in VNI (rather than preceding them as in ANSEL).

VSCII-1, also known as TCVN 5712-1 and VN1, is an extension of VSCII-2, and is a modified ASCII, since it replaces 12 of the 33 control characters with precomposed characters. Compared to VSCII-2, it (for a total of 140 non-ASCII characters):

  • Adds 44 more pre-composed uppercase letters, bringing them to the same count as the lowercase
  • Does this by replacing 12 ASCII control characters and allocating 32 graphical characters to the C1 control area, breaking ISO 2022 compatibility

Conversion from VSCII-3 to VSCII-2 or VSCII-1 and conversion from VSCII-2 to VSCII-1 are not necessary, but can result in smaller files.

Conversion from VSCII-1 to VSCII-2 or VSCII-3 and conversion from VSCII-2 to VSCII-3 require expansion of some pre-composed characters.

Character set

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VSCII-1[2]
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 A B C D E F
0x NUL Ú
00DA

1EE4
ETX
1EEA

1EEC

1EEE
BEL BS HT LF VT FF CR SO SI
1x DLE
1EE8

1EF0

1EF2

1EF6

1EF8
Ý
00DD

1EF4
CAN EM SUB ESC FS GS RS US
2x  SP  ! " # $ % & ' ( ) * + , - . /
3x 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 : ; < = > ?
4x @ A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O
5x P Q R S T U V W X Y Z [ \ ] ^ _
6x ` a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o
7x p q r s t u v w x y z { | } ~ DEL
8x À
00C0

1EA2
Ã
00C3
Á
00C1

1EA0

1EB6

1EAC
È
00C8

1EBA

1EBC
É
00C9

1EB8

1EC6
Ì
00CC

1EC8
Ĩ
0128
9x Í
00CD

1ECA
Ò
00D2

1ECE
Õ
00D5
Ó
00D3

1ECC

1ED8

1EDC

1EDE

1EE0

1EDA

1EE2
Ù
00D9

1EE6
Ũ
0168
Ax NBSP Ă
0102
Â
00C2
Ê
00CA
Ô
00D4
Ơ
01A0
Ư
01AF
Đ
0110
ă
0103
â
00E2
ê
00EA
ô
00F4
ơ
01A1
ư
01B0
đ
0111

1EB0
Bx ◌̀
0300
◌̉
0309
◌̃
0303
◌́
0301
◌̣
0323
à
00E0

1EA3
ã
00E3
á
00E1

1EA1

1EB2

1EB1

1EB3

1EB5

1EAF

1EB4
Cx
1EAE

1EA6

1EA8

1EAA

1EA4

1EC0

1EB7

1EA7

1EA9

1EAB

1EA5

1EAD
è
00E8

1EC2

1EBB

1EBD
Dx é
00E9

1EB9

1EC1

1EC3

1EC5
ế
1EBF

1EC7
ì
00EC

1EC9

1EC4

1EBE

1ED2
ĩ
0129
í
00ED

1ECB
ò
00F2
Ex
1ED4

1ECF
õ
00F5
ó
00F3

1ECD

1ED3

1ED5

1ED7

1ED1

1ED9

1EDD

1EDF

1EE1

1EDB

1EE3
ù
00F9
Fx
1ED6

1EE7
ũ
0169
ú
00FA

1EE5

1EEB

1EED

1EEF

1EE9

1EF1

1EF3

1EF7

1EF9
ý
1EF5

1ED0
  VSCII-3
  Additions for VSCII-2
  Additions for VSCII-1[9]

References

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  1. ^ Sivonen, Henri (2014-09-26). "Character encoding changes in m-c require c-c action". mozilla.dev.apps.thunderbird.
  2. ^ a b c d e "[news] TCVN 5712:1993 (VSCII) -- Vietnamese national standard". 1993-06-02. Archived from the original on 2017-01-11.
  3. ^ a b TCVN (1993). ISO-IR-180: Right-hand Part of the VSCII-2 Code Table (PDF). ITSCJ/IPSJ.
  4. ^ a b c d e Ngo, Hoc Dinh; Tran, TuBinh. "5. Why Having Vietnamese Charset (Character Set – Encoding) Conversion?". Some special functions of WinVNKey.
  5. ^ Nguyen, Minh T. "Vietnamese Conversions (Vietnet/VIQR, VNI, VPS, VISCII, VNU, TCVN, VietWare, unicode)".
  6. ^ Lunde, Ken (13 January 2009). "Chapter 1: CJKV Information Processing Overview (§ Are VISCII and VSCII identical? What about TCVN?)". CJKV Information Processing (2nd ed.). p. 17. ISBN 978-0-596-51447-1.
  7. ^ "Unicode & Vietnamese Legacy Character Encodings". Vietnamese Unicode FAQs.
  8. ^ "Unicode & Vietnamese Legacy Character Encodings". Vietnamese Unicode FAQs. TCVN3 is not double-byte, but due to the nature of its encoding, capital letters (vowels) are mapped to a separate, capital font that is similar to the normal, lowercase one.
  9. ^ Lunde, Ken (13 January 2009). "Appendix L: Vietnamese Character Sets" (PDF). CJKV Information Processing (2nd ed.). ISBN 978-0-596-51447-1.
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