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A commonly recognised share icon looks like this:. I'm guessing there must be (surely) a Unicode symbol out there for this, but so far - despite pretty thorough searching - I've come up empty-handed.
Western Somoa, Equilateral Ginuea, and some other countries don't use the IDN2008 protocol and allow Unicode including Emoji; something IDN2008 doesn't allow. I've been trying to figure out what creative Unicode names I could register under these TLDs but try as I might, I can't find the documentation for them.
It will take you to iwantmyname with the domain pre-populated along with the unicode for it and will allow you to finish the process. However, I find that many of them are no longer available. So even though domai.nr will say it is possibly available, only iwantmyname will actually tell you.
In general, there is no good reason to use ISO-8859-1 these days. That character set only support 256 characters. UTF-8 doesn't make the page size significantly larger and it supports all unicode characters: The extra French characters Œ, œ, and Ÿ; The Euro sign (€), ellipses (…), non-breaking space ( ) Fun characters like arrows and emoji
First of all, the is the Unicode "replacement character." It's the text symbol which represents that the underlying bytes do not represent a valid character. When software is attempting to display text and encounters decoding errors, it will replace the sequence of invalid bytes with this character for display, noting that there is more in the ...
I have a website that generates its title tag dynamically. the title tag is in unicode format. the title tag is limited to 65 character but sometimes Google doesn't show title tag completely in SERP. I'd like to know what is the optimum length of title tag in terms of seo for unicode titles, and is there any difference between Unicode title and ...
As you know, URL Length is important for SEO. There is a ambiguity in URL length calculation for Unicode URLs. How search engines view my Unicode URLs? For Example the following URLs are same, w...
@Guy Thomas, the meta tag is OK. But the document is not really utf-8 encoded. If you manually force the browser to interpret the document as iso-8859-1 encoded (via the View > Encoding command), you will see that “©” appears—because the document is in fact in iso-8859-1 or compatible encoding (like “ANSI”, or windows-1252).
unicode; Share. Improve this question. Follow edited Feb 21, 2012 at 8:40. Su' 19.3k 3 3 gold badges 41 41 ...
However, it should be noted that Unicode fonts are typically much larger than regular fonts because they contain so many glyphs. There are font editing tools that let you remove unused glyphs (generally a bad idea, but may be excusable in this case), but you'll need to ask those questions on the Graphic Design StackExchange site .