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  1. 1.1 This International Standard specifies two coded Hebrew character sets. a) Set 1: 78 characters including 74 basic characters needed in Hebrew texts, three ligatures used only in the Yiddish language, and one point used only in the Judeo-Spanish language.

  2. ISO/IEC 8859-8, Information technology — 8-bit single-byte coded graphic character sets — Part 8: Latin/Hebrew alphabet, is part of the ISO/IEC 8859 series of ASCII-based standard character encodings.

  3. The Unicode and HTML for the Hebrew alphabet are found in the following tables. The Unicode Hebrew block extends from U+0590 to U+05FF and from U+FB1D to U+FB4F. It includes letters, ligatures, combining diacritical marks (niqqud and cantillation marks) and punctuation.

  4. Only the extended character set differs from the original code page, both the control characters and the standard character set being plain ASCII. The character table below is showing a pixel precise graphical representation for each character, alongside with a text description.

  5. Character Sets: Basic Hebrew. >> >> >> MARC 21 Specifications for Record Structure, Character Sets, and Exchange Media. Code Table Basic Hebrew. December 2007.

  6. This part of ISO/IEC 8859 specifies a set of 155 coded graphic characters identified as Latin/Hebrew alphabet. This set of coded graphic characters is intended for use in data and text processing applications and also for information interchange.

  7. Hebrew. Range: 0590–05FF. This file contains an excerpt from the character code tables and list of character names for. The Unicode Standard, Version 16.0. This file may be changed at any time without notice to reflect errata, or other updates to the Unicode Standard. See https://www.unicode.org/errata/ for an up-to-date list of errata.

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