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Keyman Toolbox - Character Map

The Character Map tool in the Keyman Toolbox can be used to find and insert any standard Unicode character into your text.

Note

The Character Map is only available in Keyman Desktop Professional.

Opening the Character Map

To open the Keyman Character Map:

  1. Click on the Keyman Desktop icon , on the Windows Taskbar near the clock.

  2. From the Keyman Desktop menu, select Character Map.

Using the Character Map

To insert a character from the Character Map into a document:

  1. Position the text cursor in your document where you want to insert the character.

  2. Locate the character in the Character Map.

  3. Insert the character by:

    • Selecting the character and pressing the Enter key.

    • Double-clicking on the character.

    • Right-clicking on the character and selecting Insert Character.

Note

If the Insert Mode is set to Code or Name, pressing Enter or double-clicking on a character will insert the Unicode code or Unicode name of the character, not the character itself!

Character Map Options

Right click on the Character Map to display a menu with the following options:

Insert Character

Inserts the selected character at the cursor position in your document.

Filter…

Sends the curser to the 'Filter by' Character Map search field. See Filtering below.

Goto…

Displays the Goto dialog box. See Goto below.

Font…

Allows you to choose a different font for use in the Character Map. This will not affect the font being used in your document! See Fonts and Characters below.

Insert Mode

Allows you to select your desired character insert mode. See Insert Modes below.

Display Quality

Allows you to set the desired display quality for the characters in the Character Map. See Display Quality below.

Character Map Options - Filter…

You can search the Character Map by using the Filter by search field at the bottom of the Character Map window.

When no search filter is applied, the Character Map shows all characters from the Unicode standard. If a filter has been applied, the name of the filter will appear in the upper left corner of the Character Map window.

The following parameters define how the search filter in the Character Map works:

  • When searching by Unicode name, the filter field searches from the beginning of the Unicode name. If no filter options are in use, the filter field will NOT match elements from later in a character's name.

  • When searching by Unicode code point or range, the filter field allows 2, 3, and 4 digit partial code points. For example, all of the following will give the Latin Capital Letter E (U+0045):

    • 45
    • 045
    • 0045
    • U+45
    • U+045
    • U+0045
  • Filter entries can use the letters A-Z, the numerals 0-9 and the characters underscore (_), hyphen (-) and plus (+).

  • Filter entries are NOT case sensitive.

  • Spaces between words in a filter entry can be represented by either underscore (_) or space ( ). Spaces at the end of a filter entry must be represented by underscore; otherwise they will be discarded during the search.

  • Filters can be entered by Unicode character names or Unicode character ranges.

  • The filtering format for a character range is given below, where U+ is optional, XXXX is the starting Unicode value and YYYY is the finishing Unicode value.

    [U+]XXXX-[U+]YYYY
  • The filtering options for character names are:

    • ">" placed at the start of an entry will only show characters in the currently selected Character Map font. This is helpful when trying to determine which characters a given font supports.

    • "<" placed at the start of an entry will search Unicode block names instead of character names. This is helpful when searching for characters within related blocks (e.g. all Latin blocks).

    • Using "*" in an entry serves as a wildcard for any number of places in that entry. For example, searching for "greek*alpha" will find characters whose Unicode names begin with the word "Greek" and contain the word "Alpha" any number of places later. This is helpful when searching for characters that share a common element in their names (e.g. capital).

    • Using "?" anywhere in an entry serves as a wildcard for that single place in the entry. For example, searching for "s???e" will return both the SPACE and the SMILE characters, among others.

    • "[ - ]" is used to match any character in a set. For instance, [ac-z] matches all letters except "b". A set can be made up of ranges and individual characters, but cannot be made up of "?" or "*".

    • "$" placed at the end of an entry will match from the end of a Unicode character name. This option works best when used with "*" or "?".

    • As noted above, when no filtering options are in use, the filter field searches for characters starting strictly from the beginning of their Unicode names.

The following chart provides examples of filtering.

Filter Entry

Filter Result

"latin capital letter a"

Searches for all Unicode characters whose names begin with the sequence "latin capital letter a".

Finds all variations of the Latin capital letter A, plus the Latin capital letter Alpha and the Latin capital letter African d.

"latin * letter a"

Searches for all Unicode characters whose names begin with the word "Latin" and elsewhere contain the sequence "letter a".

Finds all variations of the Latin letter A, capital and lower case, along with a small selection of other characters whose names fit the search.

"latin * letter [aeiou]"

Searches for all Unicode characters whose names begin with the word "Latin" and elsewhere contain the sequence "letter a", "letter e", "letter i", "letter o", or "letter u".

Finds all variations of the Latin vowels A,E,I,O,U, both upper and lower case, along with a small selection of other characters whose names fit the search.

"<latin"

Searches for all Unicode blocks which begin with the word "Latin".

Finds all Latin blocks that begin with the word Latin (Latin-1 Supplement, Latin Extended-A, Latin Extended-B, Latin Extended Additional, Latin Extended-C, Latin Extended-D). Does not find Basic Latin.

">lao"

Searches the current Character Map font for all available characters whose names begin with the sequence "Lao".

Finds all characters of Lao available in the current font.

"YI_"

Searches for all characters whose Unicode names begin with the sequence "YI" followed by a space.

Finds all YI syllables and YI radicals. Note: You must use underscore (_) and not space ( ) at the end of a filter entry. Spaces at the end of a filter entry are discarded. If you had used "YI " instead of "YI_", the search would also return the character YIN_YANG.

"latin * letter a$"

Searches for all Unicode characters whose names begin with the word "Latin" and end with the sequence "latin a".

Finds only "a", "A" and Latin subscript small letter a.

"1000-109F"

Searches for all Unicode characters in the range from U+1000 to U+109F (inclusive).

Finds all characters - in this case, the Myanmar block.

To help you edit filters, the Filter dialog is available from the Character Map by clicking the button.

Character Map Options - Goto…

The Goto tool can be used to move directly to a specific Unicode character or value.

  1. Right click on a character and select Goto. The Enter Unicode character value or namedialog box will be displayed:

  2. Enter a Unicode character value (e.g. "6B" or "U+006B") OR enter the start of the character name (e.g. "Lao letter", which will go to the first matching character, "LAO_LETTER_KO")

  3. Click OK. The Character Map will move to the chosen character, if available.

Character Map Options - Font…

You can choose the font for use in the Character Map tool by right clicking on the Character Map window and selecting Font.

From the Font dialog, you can select to display the Character Map using any of the fonts available on your system. If a character is not available in the selected font, the Character Map will fall back to Code2000, Code2001, Code2002, Arial Unicode MS and Lucida Sans Unicode fonts. If the character is not found in these fallback fonts, the Character Map will use font linking to attempt to find a character from other fonts installed on your system. As a last resort, the Character Map will show square boxes or questions marks if no suitable font can be found for a character.

Character Map Options - Insert Mode

Characters can be inserted from the Character Map using one of three insert modes - Code, Character and Name:

  • Code - Inserts the character's Unicode code.

  • Character - Inserts the character itself.

  • Name - Inserts the character's Unicode name.

To change the character insert mode:

  1. Right-click on the Character Map.

  2. Highlight the Insert Mode submenu.

  3. Choose the desired insert mode from the submenu.

Character Map Options - Display Quality

There are three options for the display quality of characters in the Character Map.

  • Plain - Uses no font smoothing.

  • Antialiased - Uses the Windows standard font smoothing.

  • ClearType - Uses the Windows ClearType font smoothing.

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