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Tue, 11 Jan 2011 13:17:57 -0500 |
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On Tue, Jan 11, 2011 at 12:34 PM, John Delacour <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
>
>> Hey JD, you would probably know this procedure: I see a Unicode
>> character on a Web page <http://www.ytn.co.kr/>, in this case a black
>> triangle (like "[>"), and want to find out what code point it is. So
>> I copied to the clipboard and wrote a script to try and convert it
>> using something like this:
>>
>> item 1 of ((((theU as «class ut16») as string) as record) as list)
Yowza!
Assuming you're in AS 2.0, all you need is this:
id of (the clipboard as text)
For your triangle, copied from the web page you gave, that gives me
9654, which is hex 25B6.
> Perl will do it easily as well.
For example, assuming you have your Terminal environment set up for
UTF-8, you can run this in a terminal and paste the character:
perl -Mencoding=utf8 -e 'printf "%04x\n", ord <>'
The Perl installation is also a good place to look for characters by name:
$ grep RIGHT.*TRIANGLE$ /System/Library/Perl/5.10.0/unicore/NamesList.txt
22BF RIGHT TRIANGLE
25B6 BLACK RIGHT-POINTING TRIANGLE
25B7 WHITE RIGHT-POINTING TRIANGLE
25B8 BLACK RIGHT-POINTING SMALL TRIANGLE
25B9 WHITE RIGHT-POINTING SMALL TRIANGLE
25E2 BLACK LOWER RIGHT TRIANGLE
25E5 BLACK UPPER RIGHT TRIANGLE
25F9 UPPER RIGHT TRIANGLE
25FF LOWER RIGHT TRIANGLE
29CE RIGHT TRIANGLE ABOVE LEFT TRIANGLE
29D0 VERTICAL BAR BESIDE RIGHT TRIANGLE
--
Mark J. Reed <[log in to unmask]>
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