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  2. Unicode font - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unicode_font

    A Unicode font is a computer font that maps glyphs to code points defined in the Unicode Standard. [1] The vast majority of modern computer fonts use Unicode mappings, even those fonts which only include glyphs for a single writing system, or even only support the basic Latin alphabet.

  3. Unicode input - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unicode_input

    Fonts usually have incomplete Unicode coverage; most only contain the glyphs needed to support a few writing systems. However, most modern browsers and other text-processing applications are able to display multilingual content because they perform font substitution , automatically switching to a fallback font when necessary to display ...

  4. Unicode - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unicode

    A font is "Unicode compliant" if the glyphs in the font can be accessed using code points defined in The Unicode Standard. [94] The standard does not specify a minimum number of characters that must be included in the font; some fonts have quite a small repertoire.

  5. Help:Special characters - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help:Special_characters

    To display Unicode or special characters on web page(s), one or more of the Unicode fonts need to be present or installed in your computer, first. For proper working functionality, setup or configuration or settings from the web page viewing browser software also needs to be modified.

  6. Box-drawing characters - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Box-drawing_characters

    Unicode includes 128 such characters in the Box Drawing block. [1] In many Unicode fonts, only the subset that is also available in the IBM PC character set (see below) will exist, due to it being defined as part of the WGL4 character set.

  7. Open-source Unicode typefaces - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open-source_Unicode_typefaces

    Kurinto is a large collection of Pan-Unicode, OFL-licensed TrueType fonts. The intended use-case is academic publishing, especially when authoring in Microsoft Word and publishing to PDF. The primary goal is to address issues when mixing languages using Latin script with secondary languages using other scripts. [10]

  8. List of typefaces - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_typefaces

    A Unicode font is a computer font that maps glyphs to code points defined in the Unicode Standard. [8] The vast majority of modern computer fonts use Unicode mappings, even those fonts which only include glyphs for a single writing system, or even only support the basic Latin alphabet.

  9. Help:Multilingual support (Indic) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help:Multilingual_support...

    This is an optional step, only when you want to use a specific Unicode font for your chosen particular language(s) for viewing webpages. To use a specific font for webpages: For Internet Explorer 6: Go to Tools → Internet options → Fonts, choose your particular language from the Language Script pulldown menu and select a font from one of ...