Simple Unicode Keyboard For Mac
Learn to type cross symbols ☩ ☨ ☦ and more directly from your keyboard whether you're on Windows, Mac, or Linux. You can put them in Facebook, Myspace, Youtube, your blog, or anywhere you like. Religious crosses. Alt codes and more.
U+1F4A9 converts to d83d dca9 in unicode hex input, which is what OS X uses as an official input source across the OS. To use the keyboard directly with their code numbers, first enable Unicode Hex Input in System Preferences - Keyboard - Input Sources. Then, each time you wish to use that input method, switch to the Unicode Hex layout (this can be done via a keyboard shortcut that by default conflicts with spotlight) and then hold the option/alt modifier while you type the the utf-16 hex codes you wish (which is really two hex codes for characters beyond the Unicode BMP, such as 1f4a9, which is represented by d83d dca9). Option held down then d, 8, 3, d, d, c, a, 9 A which point, you will have summoned 💩 Not much fun to type.
If you have a finite number of such characters you want to make, you can set up keyboard shortcuts for them in system prefs/keyboard/text in the substitutions table. Hard to find in Sierra. In System Preference, select Keyboard, then select InputSources. The left hand pane will show your preferred language keyboard, and possibly alternates. If Unicode Hex Input is not there, click the + button beneath; you will get a long list of languages.
Scroll to the very bottom and choose others. Unicode Hex Input will appear in the right pane, then click the Add button, bottom right. Tab over to Shortcuts and choose the shortcut key.
Simple Unicode Keyboard For Mac Download
Alt+Space and Cmd+Space may already be taken by Spotlight. Either disable them, or reassign by clicking at the right-hand end of the column and typing your new key. I left them as they were and assigned Ctrl+Space for Input sources. If you do that, now when you type Ctrl+space, you will see the little flag, top right of the menu bar change to a U+. You can then enter your hex codes (which you can find out from the Emoji & Character Viewer) by holding Alt while you type the numbers. Eg, At2282 produced the Set member symbol ⊂.