U-Code - meaning and definition. What is U-Code
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What (who) is U-Code - definition

CHARACTER REPRESENTING THE SERVICE MARK OF THE POSTAL OPERATOR IN JAPAN
〠; Yubin mark; Yuubin mark; Japan zip code; 〒; 〶; Japan postal mark; U+3012; U+3020; U+3036; ⮗
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  • Several versions of the 〒 mark 〠〶〒
  • Japanese postal service mark
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U-Code      
Universal Pascal Code. Intermediate language, a generalisation of P-code for easier optimisation. Developed originally for the Los Alamos Cray-1 and the Lawrence Livermore S-1. A refined version currently used by MIPS compilers is descended from one at Stanford U. "Machine Independent Pascal Code Optimisation", D.R. Perkins et al, SIGPLAN Notices 14(8): 201-201 (1979). "A Transporter's Guide to the Stanford U-Code Compiler System", P. Nye et al, TR CSL Stanford U, June 1983. (See HPcode).
Ú         
LETTER OF THE LATIN ALPHABET
U acute; Uacute; U-acute; Ṹ; U+00DA; U with acute
Ú, ú (u-acute) is a Latin letter used in the Czech, Faroese, Hungarian, Icelandic, and Slovak writing systems. This letter also appears in Dutch, Frisian, Irish, Occitan, Pinyin, Portuguese, Spanish, Italian, Galician, and Vietnamese as a variant of the letter "U".
Ŭ         
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LETTER OF THE LATIN ALPHABET
U-breve; U with breve
Ŭ or ŭ is a letter in the Esperanto alphabet, based on u. It is also used in the Belarusian language, when written in the 20th-century form of the Belarusian Latin alphabet, and formerly in the Romanian alphabet.

Wikipedia

Japanese postal mark

(郵便記号, yūbin kigō) is the service mark of Japan Post and its successor, Japan Post Holdings, the postal operator in Japan. It is also used as a Japanese postal code mark since the introduction of the latter in 1968. Historically, it was used by the Ministry of Communications (逓信省, Teishin-shō), which operated the postal service. The mark is a stylized katakana syllable te (テ), from the word teishin (逓信(テイシン), communications). The mark was introduced on February 8, 1887 (Meiji 20.2.8).