Jōyō kanji - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Jōyō_kanjiThe jōyō kanji (常用漢字, Japanese pronunciation: [dʑoːjoːkaꜜɲdʑi], lit. "regular-use Chinese characters") is the guide to kanji characters and their readings, announced officially by the Japanese Ministry of Education. Current jōyō kanji are those on a list of 2,136 characters issued in 2010. It is a slightly modified version of the tōyō kanji, which was the initial list of secondary school -level kanji standardized after World War II.
Jōyō kanji - Wikipedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jōyō_kanjiThe jōyō kanji is the guide to kanji characters and their readings, announced officially by the Japanese Ministry of Education. Current jōyō kanji are those on a list of 2,136 characters issued in 2010. It is a slightly modified version of the tōyō kanji, which was the initial list of secondary school-level kanji standardized after World War II. The list is not a comprehensive list of all characters and reading…
What Unicode code points are needed to write Japanese Jōyō-Kanji?
japanese.stackexchange.com › questions › 44221Mar 9, 2017 · There is no simple way to narrow this down. Kanji in U+4E00 – U+9FFF should satisfy more than 99% of the needs to write Japanese kanji. I said almost because an addition of Joyo-kanji occurred in 2010, which says one added character is a historically "different" kanji from what has been included in JIS X 0208. This resulted in one joyo-kanji being in Extension B block if you strictly need to reproduce the appearance listed in the new official Joyo-kanji list.