Unicode Quick Guide
Unicode is a way of representing all characters in all human languages using numeric codes; you can access any character in any language using its code in Oxygen. Unicode Hex is how you access a character by its code, even if your keyboard doesn’t have that character.
For Mac users, it’s very easy to set yourself up to enter characters using Unicode:
- Go to System Preferences
- Choose “Keyboard”
- Select “Input Sources” from the options at the top
- Hit the + in the bottom-left of the screen; this will give you the option to add keyboard input sources
- A long list of options will come up. The one you want is “Unicode Hex Input”; select that one and choose “Add”
- Now, you should be able to choose between the default input (U.S.; indicated by an American flag) and Unicode Hex (indicated by a black box with “U+”); you switch between these in the top-right bar in your computer (where the date, wifi signal, volume, etc. display)
- As long as you have Unicode Hex Input selected, you can hold down the Option key and type the four digit code for any unicode character and it will appear in your text.
If you don’t know the code for a character you need (for example, you might want to have an é or something in the Greek alphabet), you can use the UnicodeChecker software (on the encoding computers already and you can download it on your own), or look up what you need online. Doing a Google search with “unicode” prefacing the name of character you need will almost always work and Google is usually forgiving if you don’t know the exact name of the character you’re looking for. The Unicode Consortium site also has links to code charts. And, remember that the WWP doesn’t include many of the ligatures that you might encounter in your text: see the entry on typography and special characters
Here are some common codes for WWP encoding:
long s | U+017F | ſ |
em dash | U+2014 | — |
en dash | U+2013 | – |
super dash | U+2015 | ― |
left double curly quote | U+201C | “ |
right double curly quote | U+201D | ” |
left single curly quote | U+2018 | ‘ |
right single curly quote | U+2019 | ’ |
soft hyphen | U+00AD | (looks like a regular hyphen) |
a-e ligature | U+00E6 | æ |
A-E ligature | U+00C6 | Æ |
o-e ligature | U+0153 | œ |
O-E ligature | U+0152 | Œ |