If you only have to enter a few special characters or symbols, you can use the Character Map or type keyboard shortcuts. See the tables below, or see Keyboard shortcuts for international characters for a list of ASCII characters.

As mentioned in the other answer, you must press numpad + after Alt if you want to enter characters with hex values. Typically in that case the Alt+letter will be blocked from activating the menu in most apps. However Firefox and some others may choose to capture keyboard events differently so the behavior will be different. See How to prevent Firefox keyboard shortcuts from interfering with Unicode input?


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Unicode input is the insertion of a specific Unicode character on a computer by a user; it is a common way to input characters not directly supported by a physical keyboard. Unicode characters can be produced either by selecting them from a display or by typing a certain sequence of keys on a physical keyboard. In addition, a character produced by one of these methods in one web page or document can be copied into another. In contrast to ASCII's 96 element character set (which it contains), Unicode encodes hundreds of thousands of graphemes (characters) from almost all of the world's written languages and many other signs and symbols besides.[1][better source needed]

A Unicode input system must provide for a large repertoire of characters, ideally all valid Unicode code points. This is different from a keyboard layout which defines keys and their combinations only for a limited number of characters appropriate for a certain locale.

There are two buffers. I marked them as 1 and 2 in the picture. I entered "ABCD" using the touch keyboard. In the first buffer there is only "A", but the second one contains "ABCD". I think, for some reason keyboard.getBuffer() returns only the first entry, or I am doing something wrong.

On SuSE 10.0 I used to be able to use shift + ctrl + unicode code. That does not seem to work now. How can I get this feature again? I miss it. I used to use it a lot to put the copyright symbol over my artwork in Gimp.

I have a new mac book air running Lion. I am trying to use Khmer unicode and fonts, but for some reason, my 'f' key is showing up as a 'p' key (in Khmer). I downloaded new fonts to make sure it wasn't just an issue with the font. The keyboard layout suggests that the unicode may not be correct, as it verified that the 'f' key shares the same symbol as the 'p' key. How can I fix this?

Many of the answers above are either specific to the em dash, require memorizing alt codes, or are better suited for one-off uses. The following works for any unicode character without alt codes. It uses Autokey, a handy text substitution utility.

We no longer maintain any of the keyboards on this page. The Keyman program is cross-platform (works on Windows, macOS, Linux) and the IPA (SIL) keyboard is our recommended keyboard for typing IPA: IPA (SIL)

On Windows, three keyboarding options are available: an IPA Keyman keyboard and keyboards which work through the Windows keyboarding system (MSKLC) for US, UK, FR, DE and PT (Portuguese) keyboard layouts.

It was designed to be similar to SIL's IPA Unicode Keyman Keyboard, in that the keystrokes follow a similar layout. In many cases keystrokes are merely reversed. That is, instead of typing n> to get a U+014B , you would type >n. This system is not always possible to maintain using MSKLC since the Keyman keyboard often used more than two keystrokes and this is not allowed using MSKLC. Please read IPA Unicode 6.2 (ver 1.4) MSK.pdf (in the download package) for installation instructions and the keyboard layout. Make sure that you reboot after installing the keyboard.

There are five keyboards, one is based on the US English keyboard layout, another is based on the UK English keyboard layout, another is based on the Brazil Portuguese keyboard, a fourth on the FR French keyboard layout and a fifth on the DE German keyboard layout. The FR and DE keyboards are new and have only been minimally tested. We welcome feedback.

Unicode Phonetic Keyboard from the Department of Phonetics and Linguistics at University College London. This is an installable keyboard for Windows which uses SAMPA key coding for the SIL Unicode Roman fonts.

Below are the source files if you wish to adapt the Macintosh keyboard or documentation for your own use. The application for creating the keyboard is KeyLayoutMaker: or Ukelele. See Related Packages.

KeyLayoutMaker: Jonathan Kew, 2006-06-01

KeyLayoutMaker is a Perl script designed to create Mac OS X keyboard layout files, based on simple lists of keystrokes and required Unicode characters. It is particularly suited to creating layouts for syllabic scripts.

IPA Transcription with SIL Fonts SIL Linguistics Department and NRSI staff, 2012-05-18

SIL International has produced several font sets over the years that allow for the transcription of linguistic data using the International Phonetic Alphabet. This page should help the user decide to use Unicode fonts. It provides links to many relevant resources (choosing fonts, finding keyboarding solutions, figuring appropriate Unicode codepoints, data conversion, etc) with regard to the International Phonetic Alphabet.

These kits include intuitive and customisable keyboards for typing in and Greek Hebrew, allowing you to create text that can be used directly in publications and websites. The Greek font includes breathing, accents and ancient forms, while the Hebrew font includes vowel pointing and Masoretic punctuation. The packages also include the Cardo Unicode font by David Parry.

One issue with the Keyboard library is that it only works for 7-bit ASCII characters and only for the US keyboard layout. To work around the issue I wrote a library to add international keyboard layouts and Unicode character support.

I scraped the Microsoft website to get key mappings for every keyboard layout. The library includes a header (.h) file for each key mapping and you can include multiple mappings to select at run time. (No, I don't know of any way for the Arduino to detect the mapping currently active on the target Windows machine.)

I cannot see how to get the behavior I want. That is, I want to have a couple of layers full of keys that type unicode characters that will work everywhere, especially in the terminal, and will not conflict with the Meta key.

It seems like there are just not enough scan codes and modifiers to cover all the characters you might want. I seems like a solution would be to find dozens of not-used scan codes/modifiers to send from the keyboard, and then map them to the unicode character on the OS side with a keylayout file.

Getting unicode characters to work everywhere on Mac OS, with the same input sequences, is effectively impossible, alas (not all apps use the Cocoa input system, and Apple seems almost hostile to using a Compose key). For your specific problem with the Terminal app, for just a few keys (e.g. option+b & option+f), you could have it translate those into a sequence that actually sends escape, then the target key (first toggling off option, then restoring it again once the sequence has finished).

Many Linux apps (incl. GTK+ and QT) allow to hold ctrl+shift, then tap u plus the hex code, then release to get unicode. According to this website, windows allows the same with holding Alt, then tapping + on the numpad plus the hexcode of the char, then release. Yes, it does require a registry key change, but that seems to be acceptable for me.

I opened an issue requesting an extension of the plugin in order to being able to search for the Unicode code(point): Feature Request: Extending Search for Unicode-Code(point)  Issue #3  BambusControl/obsidian-unicode-search  GitHub

I have used custom keyboard shortcuts for a long time, and as usual the new version of OSX Yosemite changes all the app translations to make them slightly different enough that none of them work. After going through all the shortcuts I discovered that the Spanish entries for next/previous item in Preview don't work. Here is a screenshot of the menu item:

Despite both texts look the same (and therefore I should be able to override the default shortcut) the custom shortcut doesn't get assigned (it did in Mavericks!). My guess is that it stopped working because Yosemite uses a different unicode combination for the first letter. How can I figure out the correct unicode sequence so that the keyboard shortcut is assigned properly?

But how can you take profit of Unicode while you still have only 56/58 keys on your keyboard ? Unicode Keyboard helps you out to advance your writing skills with ease and fun ! You will be enabled to create bi- or multinational texts, scientific documents and you will enjoy enriching your simple text-only documents, professional presentations, business letters or e-mails with fantastic new symbols.

You will find some unknown keys on the bottom row of the virtual keyboard. The four left bottom keys are only used with Right-to-Left languages like Farsi, Arabic and Hebrew. The first two will mark a change of typing direction within a script from right to left and v.v. The other two buttons are for joining special Arabic and Thai characters together (they are typed onto each other).

You will also find keyboards with so-called "Combining Diacritical Marks". They work similar to the nonspacing DeadKeys, but the letter is typed first and the accent (diacritic) afterwards. I find this method more practical. 2351a5e196

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