Greek Unicode duplicated vowels
The Greek basic Unicode range (0370-03FF) originally enciding the characters required for modern Greek: the 24-letter alphabet, a couple of numerical symbols, and vowels with tonos and/or diaeresis (in addition to Coptic and a few other symbols). When the Greek extended range (1F00-1FFF) was added to handle Polytonic Greek (for both Classical and katherevousa Greek), this basically involved the addition of accented vowels, plus breathing marks, subscript iotas, etc.
For some reason, perhaps because of an oversight, or perhaps because the editors of this revision were thought that there was some essential different between tonos and oxia (which there is not), 16 characters in the Greek basic set were duplicated in Greek extended:
Unicode | Beta Code | Basic codepoint | extended codepoint |
---|---|---|---|
ά | A/ | 03AC | 1F71 |
έ | E/ | 03AD | 1F73 |
ή | H/ | 03AE | 1F75 |
ί | I/ | 03AF | 1F77 |
ό | O/ | 03CC | 1F79 |
ύ | U/ | 03CD | 1F7B |
ώ | W/ | 03CE | 1F7D |
Ά | */A | 0386 | 1FBB |
Έ | */E | 0388 | 1FC9 |
Ή | */H | 0389 | 1FCB |
Ί | */I | 038A | 1FDB |
Ό | */O | 038C | 1FF9 |
Ύ | */U | 038E | 1FEB |
Ώ | */W | 038F | 1FFB |
ΐ | I/+ | 0390 | 1FD3 |
ΰ | U/+ | 03B0 | 1FE3 |
There should be no different between, for example, ά and ά (both alpha-oxia), so in most cases you don't need to worry about this. Your Greek Keyboards (Unicode) will make a decision and input one or the other; your Greek Fonts (Unicode) will display both identically; a search engine should be able to find both from either input (just as they should be able to strip diacritics altogether from a search term, if desired).
There have been problems with this (certain fonts in certain browsers don't get it right, for example), and so far as I know there are no recommendations for prefering one codepoint over the other in these cases.