Braille Pattern Dots-123457 Braille
⡟ is a Unicode Braille pattern character representing dots 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and 7.
U+285F
⡟ is an Extended Set 1 Unicode character for a specific Braille dot configuration. Use it when you need to display or reference that exact Braille pattern in text, layouts, or software.
Braille Pattern Dots-123457 Braille Meaning
⡟ (Unicode U+285F) is named “BRAILLE PATTERN DOTS-123457”. It encodes a particular Braille cell configuration: dots 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and 7. As a Braille pattern character, it’s most useful when you need an exact visual representation of those raised dots rather than a general Braille word or translation. In practice, designers and developers may include it to label Braille-related content, verify dot patterns, or show a specific tactile symbol in documentation, UI prototypes, or typographic mockups.
Common uses
- •Displaying a specific Braille dot pattern in accessibility or documentation text
- •Labeling diagrams or charts about Braille cell layouts and dot positions
- •Using in UI mockups or prototypes that reference Braille patterns
- •Creating typographic or educational materials showing exact dot combinations
- •Verifying Unicode rendering for a particular Braille pattern character
Examples
⡟ Braille Pattern Dots 1-2-3-4-5-7
- ⡟Braille cell pattern: ⡟
- ⡟Dots 1-2-3-4-5-7 represented by ⡟
- ⡟Check rendering of ⡟ in this font sample
- ⡟Braille dot layout example: ⡟
- ⡟Unicode character used for pattern DOTS-123457: ⡟
Variations
Technical codes
| Unicode | U+285F | |
| HTML Entity | ⡟ | |
| HTML Code | ⡟ | |
| CSS | \285F |
FAQ
What Unicode character is ⡟?
⡟ is the Unicode Braille pattern character named “BRAILLE PATTERN DOTS-123457”, code point U+285F.
How do I copy ⡟ into HTML?
You can paste the character directly, or use the HTML entity: ⡟.
What does “dots-123457” mean for this symbol?
It specifies the Braille cell configuration with raised dots in positions 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and 7.
Will it render correctly in all fonts?
Rendering depends on font support for Braille pattern characters. If it shows as a blank box, try a different Unicode-capable font.