I did it and it is this
E057 is not a valid unicode character.
The Unicode for the Trademark Symbol is a symbol used to make the assumption that the previous mark is a trademark (a trademark is a recognizable sign of a particular company).
The square root symbol is Unicode 0x221A. To show it, you either need to draw it graphically, or you need to have a Unicode representation library.
Arial Unicode MS has the peace symbol as - Unicode 262E Also you get a dove with Webdings 255
U+2120 In Unicode or a superscripted TM
We use symbols in excel when we need to add a symbol of copyright, trademark symbols, and Unicode symbols etc.
Yes Choose "Insert > Symbol" and look for the character you want (you may have to select another font to find it. A font called Marlett which Windows instlls has one) If you do not have a system or version of Word that supports Unicode (the computer I an on right now does not) then that is the only one I can find. If you do have Unicode an Arial Unicode or Lucida Unicode or Symbol font will have them. Then there always is Wingdings... üþPR
By unicode input pressing alt and type 64 at the same time
Its Unicode value is 221A according to System tool Character map Advanced view Unicode subrange Math operators. But I haven't done C in awhile, so I don't know how to or if you can. ASCII value of root symbol is 251. In C we can print this symbol by printing the character value as below printf("%c",251); this will print the root symbol
No it is not. According to the Unicode manual: Note, however, that the Unicode Standard does not encode idiosyncratic, personal, novel, or private-use characters, nor does it encode logos or graphics. Accordingly, an enormous amount of pressure by outside bodies would be necessary to have Unicode include invented characters only as a substitute for one person's single name. To include any symbol invented by any person as their name symbol would be absurd. One might restrict the added symbols only to those invented by so-called "important people", but that is rather snobbish. How does one establish the exact point at which a person becomes important enough? If publishers began to use the Prince love symbol, encoded as a private-use character, often, then it would be encoded as it would be needed for interchanging texts. The same would be true for a non-standard mathematical symbol. As of now, the Prince love symbol is simply one example of an "idiosyncratic, personal, novel" symbol.
One way to put an ankh in a HTML file is to use the ankh Unicode character U+2625. There are two ways to embed this character in a HTML file -- both ways look identical in a web browser: * use the '☥' character. * use the '&#x2625;' character entity. Alas, many computers don't have the proper fonts to display the ankh Unicode character correctly. To display an ankh symbol on such computers, embed a picture of that symbol: * use the '<img src="http://www.fileformat.info/info/unicode/char/2625/ankh.png" alt="[ankh symbol]">' image.
Note entirely sure which character, symbol or sign you are referring to. Perhaps you mean the Creative Commons logo which is a bit like the copyright symbol © but with 2 Cs side by side. If the character has a Unicode identifier, that would be easiest way of identifying it, but if it isn't in the Unicode tables then it would be impossible to say what it is without actually seeing it.
Rxvt-unicode was created in 2003-11.