Dotted_and_dotless_I_in_computing

Dotted and dotless I in computing

Dotted and dotless I in computing

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The Latin-derived letters dotted İ i and dotless I ı, which are distinct letters in the alphabets of a number of Turkic languages, unlike in English and most languages using the Latin script, have caused some issues in computing.

Error when displaying dotted İ as a dotless I while translating from Turkish to Polish

Difficulties

Unicode does not encode the uppercase form of dotless I and lowercase form of dotted İ separately from their base letters, and instead merges them with the upper and lower case forms of the Latin letter I respectively. John Cowan proposed disunification of plain Ii as capital letter dotless I and small letter I with dot above to make the casing more consistent.[1] The Unicode Technical Committee had previously rejected a similar proposal[2] because it would corrupt mapping from character sets with dotted and dotless I and corrupt data in these languages.[citation needed]

Most Unicode software uppercases ı to I, but, unless specifically configured for Turkish, it lowercases I to i. Thus uppercasing then lowercasing changes the letters. Likewise, most Unicode software uppercases i to I, changing the letter in the process.

In the Microsoft Windows SDK, beginning with Windows Vista, several relevant functions have a NORM_LINGUISTIC_CASING flag, to indicate that for Turkish and Azerbaijani locales, I should map to ı.

In the LaTeX typesetting language the dotless ı can be written with the backslash-i command: \i.

Dotted İ and dotless ı are problematic in the Turkish locales of several software packages, including Oracle DBMS, PHP, Java (software platform),[3][4] and Unixware 7, where implicit capitalization of names of keywords, variables, and tables has effects not foreseen by the application developers. The C or US English locales do not have these problems. The .NET Framework has special provisions to handle the 'Turkish i'.[5]

Many cellphones available in Turkey (as of 2008) lacked a proper localization, which led to replacing ı by i in SMS, sometimes severely distorting the sense of a text. In one instance, a miscommunication played a role in the deaths of Emine and Ramazan Çalçoban in 2008.[6][7] A common substitution is to use the character 1 for dotless ı. This is also common in Azerbaijan (see also translit), but the meaning of words is generally understood.

In some Ectaco translators, the letter İ was also treated as I (e.g. TRAFIK traffic, when it is normally TRAFİK).

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See also


References

  1. Cowan, John (September 10, 1997). "Resolving dotted and dotless "i"". [email protected] (Mailing list).
  2. Davis, Mark (September 11, 1997). "Re: Resolving dotted and dotless "i"". [email protected] (Mailing list).
  3. Winchester, Joe (September 7, 2004). "Turkish Java Needs Special Brewing". JDJ. Archived from the original on 2017-07-26. Retrieved 2008-09-12.
  4. Schindler, Uwe (2012-07-11). "The Policeman's Horror: Default Locales, Default Charsets, and Default Timezones". The Generics Policeman Blog.
  5. Diaz, Jesus (2008-04-21). "A Cellphone's Missing Dot Kills Two People, Puts Three More in Jail". Gizmodo. Retrieved 2015-08-28. The use of "i" resulted in an SMS with a completely twisted meaning: instead of writing the word "sıkışınca" it looked like he wrote "sikişince". Ramazan wanted to write "You change the topic every time you run out of arguments" (sounds familiar enough) but what Emine read was, "You change the topic every time they are fucking you" (sounds familiar too.)
  6. Orion, Egan (2008-04-26). "Cellphone Localisation Glitch Turned Deadly in Turkey – Dotted i Leads to Tragedy". The Inquirer. Archived from the original on 2010-01-02. Retrieved 2015-08-28.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)

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