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== Documentation ==
The Unicode 1.0.0 code chart is still available, including
Data for mapping between Unicode 1.1, Unicode 2.0 and other hangul encodings has been supplied by the Unicode Consortium.<ref>{{cite web | url=ftp://ftp.unicode.org/Public/MAPPINGS/OBSOLETE/EASTASIA/KSC/HANGUL.TXT | title=Korean Hangul Encoding Conversion Table | first1=K. D. | last1=Chang | first2=In Sook | last2=Choi | first3=Jung Ho | last3=Kim | date=1995-10-04 }}</ref> This data is archived as historic, but contains errors; an errata document is also supplied which corrects the mappings with reference to decompositions from the Unicode Character Database for Unicode 1.1.5,<ref>{{cite web | url=ftp://ftp.unicode.org/Public/MAPPINGS/OBSOLETE/EASTASIA/KSC/HangulReadMe.html | title=Notes and corrections for HANGUL.TXT | date=2005-10-13 }}</ref> which is itself also available.<ref>{{cite web | url=http://unicode.org/Public/1.1-Update/UnicodeData-1.1.5.txt | title=Unicode 1.1.5 data | date=1995-07-05 }}</ref> This itself contains some errors; corrected data with reference to the code chart and the source standards is documented in the [[Unicode Technical Committee]] document UTC L2/17-080, submitted by Jaemin Chung.<ref name="chung">{{cite web | url=http://unicode.org/L2/L2017/17080-three-hangul-syl.pdf | title=Informative document about three pre-Unicode-2.0 modern hangul syllables | first1=Jaemin | last1=Chung | date=2017-03-29 }}</ref> == Korean Hangul Syllables block==
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