Big5
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Big5 or Big-5 is a character encoding method of unknown origin for Traditional Chinese characters. Its Mainland China equivalent is GB.
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The original Big5 character set is sorted first by usage frequency, second by stroke count, lastly by KangXi Radicals.
The original Big5 character set missed many commonly used characters. To solve this problem, each vendor developed its own extension. The ETen extension became part of the current Big5 standard through popularity.
Big5's Chinese name 大五碼 (pinyin: dàwǔ mǎ), means "Big Five Encoding." This refers to the five companies that invented Big5.
According to some accounts, the Big5 encoding was popularized by its adoption in several commercial software packages, especially the ET chinese system which ran on MS-DOS.
The Republic of China government declared it their standard in mid-1980s since Big5 was already the de facto standard by that time.
Hong Kong also adopted Big5 for character encoding. However, Cantonese uses many archaic Chinese characters that were not available in the normal Big5 character set. To solve this problem, the Hong Kong Government created the Big5 extensions "Government Chinese Character Set" in 1995 and Hong Kong Supplementary Character Set in 1999. The Hong Kong extensions are commonly distributed as a patch.
Organization
Name
History
See also
External links