UTF characters render automatically to their visual representation even if there is a region-specific or international rep of them. Why?
As said in the question, international characters tend to download themselves and be shown in the main text. This might be unwanted for some international users who are rather used to be shown a question mark or unknown character instead, as maybe font downloading may not be wished at all for safety reasons. This is a minor problem, and I only encountered this by seeing the "Indian Rupees" sign replaced by the hindi symbol of it, instead of the familiar "Rs." abbreviation I was used to, but still a reminder to be careful with implementing Unicode.
Chosen solution
If you have a font that covers a specific character then you will always see the character and not a possible box with the hex code or the html entity code.
- "Indian Rupees" sign: ₹ (₹) (₹)
- http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Unicode/Character_reference/2000-2FFF
All Replies (1)
Chosen Solution
If you have a font that covers a specific character then you will always see the character and not a possible box with the hex code or the html entity code.
- "Indian Rupees" sign: ₹ (₹) (₹)
- http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Unicode/Character_reference/2000-2FFF