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Braille Pattern Dots-1347 Braille

⡍ (Braille pattern dots-1347) is a Unicode braille character representing a specific dot layout.

U+284D

⡍ is a Unicode braille pattern that encodes a specific arrangement of braille dots: 1, 3, 4, and 7. It’s useful when you need to display or reference braille patterns in text.

Braille Pattern Dots-1347 Braille Meaning

⡍ is the Unicode character named “BRAILLE PATTERN DOTS-1347” (code point U+284D). It represents a braille cell dot layout containing dots 1, 3, 4, and 7. Like other braille pattern characters, it’s primarily used as a visual/tactile reference in digital content—such as braille learning materials, accessibility-related UI text, or typographic displays where braille patterns are shown directly rather than being converted from words. When you copy this character, make sure the font and rendering support the Braille Patterns block so it displays correctly across devices and browsers.

Common uses

  • Including a specific braille cell pattern in braille learning or instructional text
  • Testing accessibility/typography support for Unicode braille pattern characters
  • Adding a braille-style visual cue in UI mockups or documentation
  • Creating labeled examples for linguistics or tactile writing references
  • Using the character in digital signage where braille dot diagrams are shown as text

Examples

⡍ Braille pattern dots-1347

  • Here is the braille pattern: ⡍
  • Dot layout reference: ⡍ (dots 1, 3, 4, 7).
  • Braille pattern characters can be copied directly like ⡍.
  • In the table, the entry for dots-1347 is ⡍.
  • Rendering test symbol: ⡍

Variations

Technical codes

UnicodeU+284D
HTML Entity⡍
HTML Code⡍
CSS\284D

FAQ

What does ⡍ mean?

⡍ is the Unicode braille pattern named “BRAILLE PATTERN DOTS-1347”, representing a cell with dots 1, 3, 4, and 7.

What is the Unicode code point for ⡍?

The code point is U+284D.

How can I copy ⡍ for web development?

You can copy it directly, or use the HTML entity ⡍, the CSS escape \\284D, or the JavaScript escape \\u{284D}.

Why does ⡍ sometimes display as a blank box?

If your font or browser doesn’t support the Braille Patterns block, the character may not render. Try a font with Unicode braille support.