When I use charmap, starting with Consolas and going through those other listed Monospace fonts, I don’t find it. So presumably, it searches the selected font, then Courier New, MS Sans Serif, Meiryo, then MS Gothic. The GlobalMonospace.CompositeFont contains
MS UI GOTHIC WINDOWS
I would think that windows notepad would use the GlobalMonospace, not the GlobalUserInterface: Presumably, then, it would look through the Segoes, then the Meiryo, JhengHei, and so on through the list, presumably until it finds a font with that glyph. It also has similar ones with specific language codes (for example, ja, ko)… so I assume it picks the language-specific fonts first if such a language is selected, then defaults to this one. Where the range 2460-27BF covers the 2600 block. The GlobalUserInterface.CompositeFont file includes: I was curious, so i looked at my c:\windows\fonts\Global* files…
MS UI GOTHIC INSTALL
So, I simply did a Google search, entering this text :įont which covers the miscellaneous symbols unicode blockĪnd… bingo : The second address, below, gives you some fonts, at beginning of the list, which correctly displays all the characters of that block :Īfter downloading some of them and installing them on your configuration, simply follow the Claudia’s advice to use it from inside N++ -)).īTW, it’s not necessary to really install them ! For tests, just stop N++, open these fonts and, then, restart N++ :-)) However, these fonts do not cover the totality of the 256 characters of the Miscellaneous Symbols block :-(( I, personally have some fonts, installed on my system, which can display a lot of these symbols : Fixedsys Excelsior 2.00 116 chars
MS UI GOTHIC CODE
It includes two weights, regular and bold, each of which has normal, right slanted Italic, and left-slanted styles.So, you’re looking for a font which could correctly display most of the characters of the Unicode block Miscellaneous Symbols, with characters code between \x ?įrom the reference site, here is the link to that Unicode block : Arabetics Harfi includes both Arabic and Arabic-Indic numerals, in addition to generous number of punctuation and mathematical symbols. Soft-vowel diacritic marks (harakat) are selectively positioned with most of them appearing on similar high and low levels-top left corner-, to clearly distinguish them from the letters. Arabetics Harfi includes the required Lam-Alif ligatures in addition to all vowel diacritic ligatures. The Mutamathil Taqlidi type style uses one glyph per every basic Arabic Unicode character or letter, as defined by the Unicode Standards, and one additional final form glyph, for each freely-connecting letter of the Arabic cursive text. The Arabic design of this font family follows the Mutamathil Taqlidi type style with connected glyphs, but it emphasizes a horizontal look and feel rather than verticalone, utilizing slightly varying x-heights. For Arabic, it fully supports Unicode 6.1, and the latest Arabic Supplement and Extended-A Unicode blocks. Users can either select an accented character directly or form it by keying the desired combining diacritic mark following an unaccented character. Arabetics Harfi fully supports MS 1252 Western and 1256 Arabic code pages, in addition to all transliteration characters required by the ALA-LC Romanization tables. Careful spacing and kerning was used to enhance resulting text legibility both scripts. Arabetics Harfi is a Latin Serif typeface with a comprehensive support for the Arabetic scripts, including Quranic texts.