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Combining Diacritical Marks is a Unicode block containing the most common combining characters.It also contains the character "Combining Grapheme Joiner", which prevents canonical reordering of combining characters, and despite the name, actually separates characters that would otherwise be considered a single grapheme in a given context.
Circled Latin capital letter C ¤ Currency sign: Square lozenge ("Pillow") various Currency symbols † ‡ Dagger: Obelus: Footnotes, Latin cross – — Dash: Hyphen, Hyphen-minus, minus sign: Em dash, En dash ° Degree sign: Masculine ordinal indicator * * * Dinkus: Asterism, Fleuron, Dingbat (many) Dingbat: Dinkus, Fleuron ⌀ Diameter
HTML and XML provide ways to reference Unicode characters when the characters themselves either cannot or should not be used. A numeric character reference refers to a character by its Universal Character Set/Unicode code point, and a character entity reference refers to a character by a predefined name.
The Latin letters C and c have Unicode encodings U+0043 C LATIN CAPITAL LETTER C and U+0063 c LATIN SMALL LETTER C. These are the same code points as those used in ASCII and ISO 8859 . There are also precomposed character encodings for C and c with diacritics, for most of those listed above ; the remainder are produced using combining diacritics .
In Python, if a name is intended to be "private", it is prefixed by one or two underscores. Private variables are enforced in Python only by convention. Names can also be suffixed with an underscore to prevent conflict with Python keywords. Prefixing with double underscores changes behaviour in classes with regard to name mangling.
latin capital letter a with circumflex à u+00c3: 199: 0195: latin capital letter a with tilde Ä u+00c4: 142: 0196: latin capital letter a with diaeresis Å u+00c5: 143: 0197: latin capital letter a with ring above Æ u+00c6: 146: 0198: latin capital letter ae Ç u+00c7: 128: 0199: latin capital letter c with cedilla È u+00c8: 212: 0200 ...
Python, for variable names, function names, method names, and module or package (i.e. file) names [3] PHP uses SCREAMING_SNAKE_CASE for class constants; PL/I [21] R, for variable names, function names, and argument names, especially in the tidyverse style [22] Ruby, for variable and method names [23]
Latin Capital letter C with cedilla: U+00C8 È Latin Capital letter E with grave: U+00C9 É Latin Capital letter E with acute: U+00CA Ê Latin Capital letter E with circumflex: U+00CB Ë Latin Capital letter E with diaeresis: U+00CC Ì Latin Capital letter I with grave: U+00CD Í Latin Capital letter I with acute: U+00CE Î Latin Capital letter ...