free-symbols

Braille Pattern Dots-2467 Braille

⡪ is a Unicode Braille pattern character: dots 2, 4, 6, and 7.

U+286A

⡪ is a Unicode character in the Braille Patterns block. It represents a specific dot arrangement used for braille pattern display and text handling. Use it in documents, mockups, or developer workflows that need exact braille glyphs.

Braille Pattern Dots-2467 Braille Meaning

⡪ (Unicode U+286A) is named “BRAILLE PATTERN DOTS-2467”. As a braille pattern character, it visually encodes which braille dots are raised in a cell—specifically dots 2, 4, 6, and 7. Unlike fully translated braille text, this character is primarily a pattern/glyph representation used when you need a particular dot layout for design, accessibility mockups, educational material, or low-level braille visualization. Because it’s a Unicode braille symbol, it can be copied directly into supporting fonts and rendered consistently across environments that include this code point.

Common uses

  • Designing braille callouts or educational diagrams that require a precise dot layout
  • Creating UI mockups for accessibility previews and braille keyboard or keypad screens
  • Annotating documents that explain braille dot configurations by showing the exact pattern
  • Using in developer tools or logs where a specific braille pattern glyph must be represented
  • Composing training or testing content for braille display and rendering verification

Examples

⡪ Braille pattern dots-2467

  • Braille pattern: ⡪ (dots 2-4-6-7).
  • For the raised dots configuration, use ⡪.
  • Shown below is the braille pattern cell: ⡪.
  • Accessibility preview includes the dot pattern ⡪.
  • Unicode reference for this glyph is U+286A: ⡪.

Variations

Technical codes

UnicodeU+286A
HTML Entity⡪
HTML Code⡪
CSS\286A

FAQ

What does ⡪ represent?

⡪ is the Unicode Braille pattern “dots-2467”, meaning dots 2, 4, 6, and 7 are raised in the braille cell.

What is the Unicode code point for this symbol?

The Unicode code point is U+286A.

How can I copy ⡪ in HTML?

You can use the HTML entity: ⡪.

Will ⡪ render on all devices?

It depends on font support for the Braille Patterns block. If a font doesn’t include this code point, the symbol may not display correctly.