Braille Pattern Dots-2367 Braille
⡦ is a Unicode braille pattern for dots 2, 3, 6, and 7.
U+2866
⡦ (U+2866) is a Unicode braille pattern used to represent a specific dot configuration. It’s part of the Unicode “Extended Set 1” braille patterns and can be copied into text, code, or UI.
Braille Pattern Dots-2367 Braille Meaning
⡦ is the Unicode character named “BRAILLE PATTERN DOTS-2367” (U+2866). It represents a braille cell where dots 2, 3, 6, and 7 are raised. Because it’s a braille pattern character (not a plain punctuation mark), it’s most useful when you’re constructing or displaying braille-like content—such as building a braille visualization, labeling a dot layout, or using the character directly in interfaces that support braille symbols. Its meaning in a reading system depends on the braille convention and mapping used in your specific context; the symbol itself specifically encodes the dot pattern.
Common uses
- •Displaying or prototyping braille dot patterns in a web or app UI
- •Labeling or annotating braille cells in accessibility/design documentation
- •Using the character directly in braille-pattern text content (where supported)
- •Rendering dot-pattern diagrams for education or testing typography
- •Including the symbol in code samples or content systems that store Unicode braille characters
Examples
⡦ Braille Pattern Dots-2367
- ⡦Pattern: ⡦
- ⡦Dots 2-3-6-7: ⡦
- ⡦Braille cell ⡦ in a label
- ⡦U+2866 corresponds to ⡦
- ⡦Copy this braille pattern: ⡦
Variations
Technical codes
| Unicode | U+2866 | |
| HTML Entity | ⡦ | |
| HTML Code | ⡦ | |
| CSS | \2866 |
FAQ
What does ⡦ represent?
⡦ is the Unicode braille pattern “DOTS-2367”, meaning dots 2, 3, 6, and 7 are raised.
What is the Unicode code point for ⡦?
The Unicode code point is U+2866.
How can I paste or generate this symbol in HTML?
Use the HTML entity ⡦ in your markup.
Do I need a special font for ⡦ to display correctly?
It depends on the device and installed fonts. For best results, use a Unicode-capable font that includes braille pattern glyphs.