free-symbols

Braille Pattern Dots-1578 Braille

⣑ is a braille pattern character representing a specific dot arrangement: dots 1, 5, 7, and 8.

U+28D1

⣑ is a braille pattern symbol identified as “BRAILLE PATTERN DOTS-1578.” It’s useful when you need a precise braille cell representation in text. You can copy it directly or use its code point in apps and stylesheets.

Braille Pattern Dots-1578 Braille Meaning

⣑ (Unicode U+28D1) is a braille pattern character labeled “BRAILLE PATTERN DOTS-1578.” It represents a single braille cell layout where dots 1, 5, 7, and 8 are raised. Because it’s a pattern-only character (not a full braille letter word by itself), it’s commonly used in contexts that require exact dot-geometry, such as teaching materials, labeling, or technical demonstrations of braille dot positions. When you display or print it, the look depends on the font and rendering support for braille pattern characters.

Common uses

  • Braille dot position demonstrations in accessibility tutorials or classroom materials
  • Labelling or annotating diagrams that show which braille dots are raised
  • Creating consistent, text-based braille pattern notation in documentation
  • UI mockups or prototypes that need a specific braille cell graphic character
  • Digital content where exact braille dot patterns must be referenced in plain text

Examples

⣑ Braille pattern dots-1578

  • The raised dots are 1, 5, 7, and 8: ⣑.
  • Diagram label for dot pattern 1578: ⣑.
  • Braille cell preview: ⣑.
  • In this set of patterns, ⣑ marks the target arrangement.
  • Use the same character ⣑ to keep notation consistent.

Variations

Technical codes

UnicodeU+28D1
HTML Entity⣑
HTML Code⣑
CSS\28D1

FAQ

What does ⣑ represent?

⣑ is the Unicode braille pattern “BRAILLE PATTERN DOTS-1578,” meaning dots 1, 5, 7, and 8 are raised in a braille cell.

What is the Unicode code point for ⣑?

The Unicode code point for ⣑ is U+28D1.

How can I copy ⣑ into my project?

You can copy the character directly, or use the HTML entity ⣑, the CSS/Unicode escape \\28D1, or the JavaScript escape \\u{28D1}.

Will ⣑ look the same on every device?

Not always. The appearance depends on whether the font/rendering system supports braille pattern characters like U+28D1.