This is the command unicode that can be run in the OnWorks free hosting provider using one of our multiple free online workstations such as Ubuntu Online, Fedora Online, Windows online emulator or MAC OS online emulator
PROGRAM:
NAME
unicode - command line unicode database query tool
SYNOPSIS
unicode [options] string
DESCRIPTION
This manual page documents the unicode command.
unicode is a command line unicode database query tool.
OPTIONS
-h --help
Show help and exit.
-x --hexadecimal
Assume string to be a hexadecimal number
-d --decimal
Assume string to be a decimal number
-o --octal
Assume string to be an octal number
-b --binary
Assume string to be a binary number
-r --regexp
Assume string to be a regular expression
-s --string
Assume string to be a sequence of characters
-a --auto
Try to guess type of string from one of the above (default)
-mMAXCOUNT
--max=MAXCOUNT
Maximal number of codepoints to display, default: 20; use 0 for unlimited
-iCHARSET
--io=IOCHARSET
I/O character set. For maximal pleasure, run unicode on UTF-8 capable terminal and
specify IOCHARSET to be UTF-8. unicode tries to guess this value from your locale,
so with properly set up locale, you should not need to specify it.
--fcp=CHARSET
--fromcp=CHARSET
Convert numerical arguments from this encoding, default: no conversion. Multibyte
encodings are supported. This is ignored for non-numerical arguments.
-cADDCHARSET
--charset-add=ADDCHARSET
Show hexadecimal reprezentation of displayed characters in this additional charset.
-CUSE_COLOUR
--colour=USE_COLOUR
USE_COLOUR is one of on off auto
--colour=on will use ANSI colour codes to colourise the output
--colour=off won't use colours.
--colour=auto will test if standard output is a tty, and use colours only when it
is.
--color is a synonym of --colour
-v --verbose
Be more verbose about displayed characters, e.g. display Unihan information, if
available.
-w --wikipedia
Spawn browser pointing to English Wikipedia entry about the character.
--wt --wiktionary
Spawn browser pointing to English Wiktionary entry about the character.
--brief
Display character information in brief format
--format=fmt
Use your own format for character information display. See the README for details.
--list
List (approximately) all known encodings.
USAGE
unicode tries to guess the type of an argument. In particular, if the arguments looks like
a valid hexadecimal representation of a Unicode codepoint, it will be considered to be
such. Using
unicode face
will display information about U+FACE CJK COMPATIBILITY IDEOGRAPH-FACE, and it will not
search for 'face' in character descriptions - for the latter, use:
unicode -r face
For example, you can use any of the following to display information about U+00E1 LATIN
SMALL LETTER A WITH ACUTE (á):
unicode 00E1
unicode U+00E1
unicode á
unicode 'latin small letter a with acute'
You can specify a range of characters as argumets, unicode will show these characters in
nice tabular format, aligned to 256-byte boundaries. Use two dots ".." to indicate the
range, e.g.
unicode 0450..0520
will display the whole cyrillic and hebrew blocks (characters from U+0400 to U+05FF)
unicode 0400..
will display just characters from U+0400 up to U+04FF
Use --fromcp to query codepoints from other encodings:
unicode --fromcp cp1250 -d 200
Multibyte encodings are supported: unicode --fromcp big5 -x aff3
and multi-char strings are supported, too:
unicode --fromcp utf-8 -x c599c3adc5a5
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