Typing Nepali is very easy on our website. You can start by typing in Latin letters (e.g, a, b, c etc), which will then be converted to characters that have similar pronunciation in the Nepali Language.To give you an example, if you type in "Namaste" it will be converted to "".

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.


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Alternatively, precede the correct character code with the text "U+". For example, typing "1U+B5" and pressing ALT+X will always return the text "1", while typing "1B5" and pressing ALT+X will return the text "".

I will shamelessly plug a little tool I wrote for entering symbols in Windows as I find any solution usually presented too cumbersome for daily frequent use. My personal use case is typing the Swedish  for example on an international US keyboard without having to switch layouts.

Press and hold down the Alt key.Press the + (plus) key on the numeric keypad.Type the hexidecimal unicode value.Release the Alt key.Alas, this appears to require a registry setting. It is usually set but if needed, under HKEY_Current_User/Control Panel/Input Method, set EnableHexNumpad to "1". If you have to add it, set the type to be REG_SZ.

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.

Unicode characters can then be entered by holding down Alt, and typing + on the numeric keypad, followed by the hexadecimal code, and then releasing Alt.[2] This may not work for 5-digit hexadecimal codes like U+1F937. Some versions of Windows may require the digits 0-9 to be typed on the numeric keypad or require NumLock to be on.[citation needed]

I'm using a non-standard keyboard layout. Before formatting my laptop I tried using the standard US International layout but it didn't help.I'm using a Windows version of the English (intl., with AltGr dead keys) keyboard layout. To be specific: this one

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.

Is there a way to "type" in ? or similar on a laptop running Win 10 without specific software installed and without any special keys on the keyboard? I googled it a bit but the hints didn't work out or required some key combos that I can't see on my computer.

In Windows you can insert a Unicode character up to 255 decimal value by holding down alt and typing the decimal value on the numpad (if you have one) then releasing alt, this won't work for the snail though because it is higher than 255 (128012) so that rules out notepad from being able to do it. But apps like word and other rich text editors can enter Unicode characters by typing there unicode hex values then pressing alt+x so to get a snail you would type U+1f40c[ALT+x] (the U+ is optional) other than that it is up to each program to figure out how they want to do it if at all. Happy ?ing!

I got myself a 75% keyboard last year (a GMMK Pro, specifically) and overall haven't had much difficulty adjusting to not having a number pad. However, the one thing that I miss over and over again is the ability to easily type out unicode characters. So far I've made do with Character Map in Windows and an extension in VS Code for my most commonly used characters, but that's a pretty weak replacement.

I pulled the old material from my Unicode tutorial and the keyboard I had created when I heard Apple was including a Greek Polytonic Unicode keyboard with OS X 10.4. From the Tiger features page, it says,More Languages and ScriptsTiger includes... a new input mode for Korean and extended system fonts to support Greek (modern and classical)...So, now the answer to the question is simple.Q: How do I type Greek using Unicode?A: Go to the International preferences pane, go to the "Input menu" tab and enable show input menu in the menu bar. Then scroll down the list and add a checkmark to "Greek Polytonic" keyboard.With that enabled, you can used the menu to go from your native language to Greek and back. Set up key combos to switch back and forth on the fly using the Keyboard preference panel.Here is the key mapping for the extended Greek Polytonic keyboard:Shift key down:Option key down:Shift + Option keys down:It looks like the keys are mapped close to the Greek national keyboard, including:acute ]}grave 'diaresis :circumflex [iota subscript {smooth aspirate 'rough aspirate "smooth with acute /rough with acute ?smooth with grave =rough with grave +smooth with circumflex -rough with circumflex _question mark qbicolon Qterminal sigma wacute with diaresis Wupsilon Ytheta Uomega vxi jphi fchi xYou type the accent first, then the character and it combines into one character. Voila.

We cannot type Bangla correctly using the "Avro Keyboard" Software (as Unicode). Needless to say, there is no issue with bangla typing in Adobe Photoshop using the "Avro Keyboard" (as Unicode). Please fix this issue for both softwares (Affinity Photo & Affinity Designer) as soon as possible.

Please support Unicode typing. This is 2020 and your otherwise wonderful software only support typing in Ascii... We are replacing Adobe's line of softwares for your products, considering it to be Very effective. This is a BIG Deal for us trust me for not being able to publish a non English/ non European language text. Please prioritize this.

As already mentioned, iTerm worked fine when it was sent Unicode keystrokes by Hammerspoon, so it's not as if iTerm was incapable of it. Keyboard Maestro however, does something more elaborate: it will attempt to find each Unicode character in the currently active Input Source (ie the keyboard layout), and will replay the actual combination of modifier keys and letter required to produce that character.

For example, the middle dot () is typed with option-shift-9 under my current keyboard layout. Instead of sending a simple key event with just the middle dot, KM sends a full blown option-shift-9 to iTerm, which (in my current setup) treats the option key as Esc+:


(Switching this to Normal would fix the issue but is not an option)

"To use the keyboard directly with their code numbers, first enable Unicode Hex Input in System Preferences -> Keyboard -> Input Sources. Then, each time you wish to use that input method, switch to the Unicode Hex layout .. " "each time you wish to use that input method, switch to the Unicode Hex layout (this can be done via a keyboard shortcut that by default conflicts with spotlight) and then hold the option/alt modifier while you type the the utf-16 hex codes you wish (which is really two hex codes for characters beyond the Unicode BMP, such as 1f4a9, which is represented by d83d dca9).

Note the icon in the top right of the character popover. It changes the popover to the full Character Viewer, which cannot be navigated by the keyboard. Click the icon in the top right of the Character Viewer to return to the popover. Many thanks to @Tom Gewecke for this information.

To use the keyboard directly with their code numbers, first enable Unicode Hex Input in System Preferences -> Keyboard -> Input Sources. Then, each time you wish to use that input method, switch to the Unicode Hex layout (this can be done via a keyboard shortcut that by default conflicts with spotlight) and then hold the option/alt modifier while you type the the utf-16 hex codes you wish (which is really two hex codes for characters beyond the Unicode BMP, such as 1f4a9, which is represented by d83d dca9).

In System Preference, select "Keyboard", then select "Input Sources". The left hand pane will show your preferred language keyboard, and possibly alternates. If Unicode Hex Input is not there, click the + button beneath; you will get a long list of languages. Scroll to the very bottom and choose others. Unicode Hex Input will appear in the right pane, then click the Add button, bottom right.

Tab over to Shortcuts and choose the shortcut key. AltSpace and CmdSpace may already be taken by Spotlight. Either disable them, or reassign by clicking at the right-hand end of the column and typing your new key. I left them as they were and assigned CtrlSpace for Input sources.

A mac keyboard layout can be an XML or a .bundle file and you can use the free app Ukelele to clone an existing layout, modify the mappings as you need, and then export and install the new layout. The app is only used the create the layout so it does not need to be loaded in the system memory like some shortcut mapping apps do. 2351a5e196

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