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Unicode Unicode uses 8-bit, 16-bit or 32-bit encoding. Unicode represents a wide range of characters including different languages, mathematical symbols and emojis. Unicode can represent a greater range of characters than ASCII. Unicode occupies more space and is more demanding on memory than ASCII.
The code point is a unique number for a character or some symbol such as an accent mark or ligature. Unicode supports more than a million code points, which are written with a U followed by a plus sign and the number in hex; for example, the word Hello is written U+0048 U+0065 U+006C U+006C U+006F (see hex chart).
The Unicode Standard itself defines three encodings: UTF-8, UTF-16, and UTF-32, though several others exist. Of these, UTF-8 is the most widely used by a large margin, in part due to its backwards-compatibility with ASCII.
Replication Server supports three Unicode datatypes, unichar, univarchar, and un. Unicode allows you to mix languages from different language groups in the same data server. The Unicode datatypes behave exactly like their equivalent Replication Server datatypes.
For example, A is represented by 41x when Unicode data is being displayed. You can also make changes to the data in a column stored in Unicode by turning hexadecimal display on (HEX ON command) and overtyping the hexadecimal characters directly.
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Unique Code: Each character in Unicode has a unique 4 to 6-digit hexadecimal number. For Example, the letter A has the code 0041, represented as U+0041.
Unicode assigns a unique code point to each character, regardless of its script or language. It categorizes characters into blocks based on their script, such as Latin, Cyrillic, Arabic, and Chinese. This allows computers to correctly interpret and display text in different languages without conflicts or ambiguity.

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