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japanuspus
461 days ago
If you want to dive into the details, you can copy the "fonted" output to a unicode analyzer. [0] is an online unicode analyzer that seems to work well.
[0]:
https://devina.io/unicode-analyser
1 comments
antonhag
461 days ago
I often reach for jq to understand what unicode is in a string, e.g.:
[wl-paste|xclip-o|pbpaste] | jq -R --ascii-output
It doesn't provide any per-character explanation, but it is local and I already have jq installed.
link