Yes but the decomposition issues are a little bit trickier and there may bite hard. Emmanuel On Jan 12, 2011, at 3:45 AM, David Livesay wrote: > You can always copy the character, paste it into an new document in > BBEdit and select "Hex Dump Front Document" from the File menu. > > Just for grins, here's how you can get the unicode value in hex (for > that particular character on that particular page) with JavaScript > in Safari 5: > > str = > document.getElementById("footer").children[1].children[0].innerText > "Family 사이트 ▶" > str.charCodeAt(str.length - 1).toString(16) > "25b6" > > On Jan 11, 2011, at 8:32 PM, Walter Ian Kaye wrote: > >> At 05:34 p +0000 01/11/2011, John Delacour didst inscribe upon an >> electronic papyrus: >> >>> At 01:38 -0800 11/01/2011, Walter Ian Kaye 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) >>>> >>>> and then convert the string to hex, but it didn't match the code >>>> point in the Character Palette (25B6, or possibly 25BA). >>>> >>>> Any ideas? >>> >>> >>> The best idea is almost cetainly this: >>> >>> <http://earthlingsoft.net/UnicodeChecker/> >>> >>> UnicodeChecker is scriptable. An invaluable tool. >> >> Awesome! I never knew of that program. Thanks!! >> >> >> At 01:17 p -0500 01/11/2011, Mark J. Reed didst inscribe upon an >> electronic papyrus: >> >>> 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. >> >> I'm still on Tiger -- best version of OS X ever. Still supports >> creator codes! >> >> >> thanks, >> -boo