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NAME

       uniname - Name the characters in a Unicode text file

SYNOPSIS

       uniname ([option flags]) (<file name>)

       If  no  input  file  name  is supplied, uniname reads from the standard
       input.

DESCRIPTION

       uniname names  the  characters  in  a  Unicode  text  file.   For  each
       character,  uniname defaults to printing the character offset, the byte
       offset, the hexadecimal  UTF-32  character  code,  the  encoding  as  a
       sequence  of  hex  byte  values, the glyph, and the character’s Unicode
       name. Command line flags allow undesired information to be  suppressed.
       Glyphs  that  do  not  display  nicely,  such as control characters and
       spaces, are not displayed.  For the Latin-1 control  characters,  whose
       official  Unicode  name is "control", the real name is given. Character
       and byte offsets both start from 0.

       Where a character does not have a unique Unicode name, as is  the  case
       with  Chinese  characters, the character is identified as "character in
       such-and-such a  range".   However,  if  the  character  is  a  Chinese
       character listed in Nelson’s dictionary, the Nelson number is supplied.

       By default, input is expected to be UTF-8. Native order UTF-32  may  be
       specified  via the command line flag If invalid UTF8 is encountered, an
       explanation is printed as to why it is invalid.  -q.

COMMAND LINE FLAGS

       -A     Skip ASCII whitespace characters.

       -a     Skip ASCII characters.

       -B     Skip characters within the Basic Multilingual Plane.

       -b     Suppress printing of byte offset.

       -c     Suppress printing of character offset.

       -e     Suppress printing of encoding.

       -g     Suppress printing of glyph.

       -h     Print usage information.

       -l     Print line number.

       -n     Suppress printing of Unicode name.

       -p     Suppress printing of headers every screenfull.

       -q     Input is native order UTF-32.

       -r     Print Unicode range.  The ranges reported include both  official
              Unicode  ranges  and  the constructed language ranges within the
              Private Use Areas registered with the Conscript Unicode Registry
              (http://www.evertype.com/standards/csur/).

       -s <character offset>
              Skip to specified character offset.

       -S <byte offset>
              Skip  to  specified  byte  offset.  Note  that  even if the file
              consists of well-formed Unicode there is no guarantee  that  the
              byte  sequence  beginning  at  an  arbitrary  byte will be valid
              Unicode. This option is provided for use  where  other  programs
              generate only byte offsets or where it is necessary to skip over
              damaged Unicode. In most circumstances use of a character offset
              will be more apprpriate. If a byte offset is used, the character
              offsets shown are with respect to the beginning of  the  section
              of the file examined rather than the beginning of the file.

       -u     Suppress printing of UTF32 code.

       -V     Validate  the  input.  In  this case, nothing is done other than
              determine whether the input is valid UTF-8 Unicode. If it is, no
              output  is  produced  and  the  program  exits with status 0. If
              invalid UTF-8 is encountered, the program reports  the  location
              of  the  first  invalid  UTF-8  encountered,  explains why it is
              invalid, and exits with status 1.

       -v     Print version information.

SEE ALSO

       unidesc

REFERENCES

       Unicode Standard, version 5.1

AUTHOR

       Bill Poser
       billposer@alum.mit.edu

LICENSE

       GNU General Public License

                                February, 2009                      uniname(1)