Difference between revisions of "Unicode tricks"
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The standardized Unicode characters that best represent a checkbox are: | The standardized Unicode characters that best represent a checkbox are: | ||
− | ?, U+2610 Ballot box | + | ?, U+2610 Ballot box <br> |
− | ?, U+2611 Ballot box with check | + | ?, U+2611 Ballot box with check <br> |
− | ?, U+2612 Ballot box with X | + | ?, U+2612 Ballot box with X <br> |
If you don't have a Unicode-safe editor you can naturally spell them as ☐ ☑ and ☒. | If you don't have a Unicode-safe editor you can naturally spell them as ☐ ☑ and ☒. | ||
== See also == | == See also == | ||
+ | |||
[[wp:Checkbox]] [[Fonts]] [[I18n]] | [[wp:Checkbox]] [[Fonts]] [[I18n]] | ||
[[Category:Fonts]] | [[Category:Fonts]] |
Revision as of 13:37, 13 January 2016
Sometimes you just want a character that is not a standard letter, that will show up in email or a webpage. For example, we made this handy 'Used Car Buying Checklist' without any HTML forms by simply using the Unicode character for a checkbox.
? ? ?[edit | edit source]
☐ ☑ ☒[edit | edit source]
The standardized Unicode characters that best represent a checkbox are:
?, U+2610 Ballot box
?, U+2611 Ballot box with check
?, U+2612 Ballot box with X
If you don't have a Unicode-safe editor you can naturally spell them as ☐ ☑ and ☒.