These are a few of my favorite things…
I like ASCII. Do I like ASCII because of all the wonderful things one can do with its extraordinarily large repertoire of 94 printable characters? Actually, yes. Before I defend that answer, I'd like to point out that ASCII has three important strengths: simplicity, robustness, and ubiquity. In other words, ASCII is simple in that it has a relatively small number of characters; it forms a subset of virtually every encoding, Unicode or otherwise; and is supported everywhere. In fact, ASCII can be used to represent Unicode through the use of notations. Richard Ishida's excellent Unicode Code Converter is an excellent way to explore the various notations that are currently in use.

I really like Unicode. Unlike legacy encodings, Unicode covers a much broader collection of scripts for our world's languages, and also defines properties that allow implementations to more intelligently support its 100K+ characters.
Speaking of Unicode, I actually like all three of its encoding forms, meaning UTF-8, UTF-16, and UTF-32. It's difficult to select a favorite from among them, because all three are useful. UTF-8 is a superset of ASCII in that its one-byte portion is the same as ASCII. UTF-32 is the most human-readable in hexadecimal form, and is the basis of Unicode scalar values, such as U+5263 for 剣.
I like Unicode's 16 Supplementary Planes. The BMP (Basic Multilingual Plane) is nearly full, and any new large repertoires must be added outside of it, meaning in one of the Supplementary Planes. As of Unicode Beyond-BMP Top Ten List should also be checked out.
I like fonts. ☺
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ShanhaiFonts
Brand:山海字库
Area:China

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Cangji Fonts
Brand: 仓迹字库
Area: China

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JT Foundry
Brand: 翰字铸造
Area: Taiwan, China

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Handmadefont
Brand:
Area: Estonia

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·千图字体
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HyFont Studio
Brand: 新美字库
Area: China

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- ·How to Read a Painting by Patrick de Rynck
- ·The Form Book by Borries Schwesinger





















