In a number of ways, depending on which operating system you are running and which utilities you have installed.
See http://ipa4linguists.pbworks.com/ which is a site giving ways of accessing IPA (International Phonetic Alphabet) characters for linguists, but the many methods they suggest work equally well for other Unicode characters. The provide methods that work generally, methods that work with particular common software, and cover all the most common operating systems.
By unicode input pressing alt and type 64 at the same time
I did it and it is this
By copying and pasting this:™™ is Unicode character x0099 [that's a hexadecimal number, hence the x]. Unfortunately whilst Unicode standardises the character set itself, there seems to be no standard way to type such characters using a keyboard - it depends upon your operating system, your settings therein, and your application (and the application's version).Good resources:Finding Unicode characters:http://www.fileformat.info/info/unicode/index.htmMethods to type the character:http://www.fileformat.info/tip/microsoft/enter_unicode.htmhttp://www.georgehernandez.com/h/xComputers/CharacterSets/Shortcuts.asp#InputLocaleInternationalisation side-bar add-on for Firefox:https://addons.mozilla.org/en-us/firefox/addon/10573/
Rxvt-unicode was created in 2003-11.
The certains number are used for unicode, which is the code used to generate/alter/create WonderMail. The letters that can't be used are not part of the Unicode.
Arial Unicode MS was created in 1998.
You'll need a Unicode typeface that supports the Unicode 20B1 character, which is rare. An alternative is the Unicode 20A7 character which is slightly more common. To see if your typeface has it, type 20B1 and then, without spacing, Alt-X. Then do the same with 20A7 and see if that works. Hope I helped you :)
Preeti To Unicode COnverter is one of the most widely used tool to convert nepali traditional roman font to unicode and vice versa.
Java Supports International programming so java supports Unicode
That sounds like a quiz question asking for the answer Unicode.
That depends on your situation. If you have a Unicode-encoded file that you wish to read, you can try to open it with a Unicode-enabled editor, such as SC Unipad (http://www.unipad.org/main/). == ==
The codepoint of a smiley face in Unicode is 0x263A. To type one on Windows, type Alt+263A. On Linux, it is Shift+Alt+263A.