Cjk Compatibility Ideograph-f95e Letter
丹 is a CJK compatibility ideograph character (U+F95E) used in some fonts and legacy text contexts.
U+F95E
丹 is a CJK (Chinese/Japanese) compatibility ideograph identified as U+F95E. It’s primarily used when you specifically need this compatibility character in text or design assets. Below you’ll find copy options, practical uses, and examples.
Cjk Compatibility Ideograph-f95e Letter Meaning
丹 (U+F95E) is a CJK compatibility ideograph from the “CJK COMPATIBILITY IDEOGRAPH” block. Compatibility ideographs are used to support characters that have standardized equivalents, legacy encodings, or particular font/display behavior. In everyday writing, you typically won’t encounter this exact codepoint unless you’re working with specialized texts, older documents, or font-specific character sets. If you’re building a page, label, or document that must match an existing source, copying the exact glyph matters more than assigning a broad “meaning.” Always verify how it renders in your target font and platform.
Common uses
- •Copying the exact character from legacy documents or old digital text where matching the codepoint is important
- •Typography and font testing for CJK compatibility ideographs (ensuring the glyph displays correctly)
- •Recreating text strings from PDFs, screenshots, or database exports that contain U+F95E
- •Using the character in design mockups or UI elements that require a specific CJK glyph
- •Troubleshooting encoding/display issues when a specific codepoint must be preserved
Examples
丹 CJK Compatibility Ideograph-F95E
- 丹Custom tag: 丹
- 丹Legacy text sample: ABC 丹 DEF
- 丹UI label (demo): 丹 Settings
- 丹Code snippet: print('丹')
- 丹Document excerpt: 見出し 丹 ここから
Variations
Technical codes
| Unicode | U+F95E | |
| HTML Entity | 丹 | |
| HTML Code | 丹 | |
| CSS | \F95E |
FAQ
What does the Cjk Compatibility Ideograph-f95e letter mean?
丹 (U+F95E) is a CJK compatibility ideograph from the “CJK COMPATIBILITY IDEOGRAPH” block. Compatibility ideographs are used to support characters that have standardized equivalents, legacy encodings, or particular font/display behavior. In everyday writing, you typically won’t encounter this exact codepoint unless you’re working with specialized texts, older documents, or font-specific character sets. If you’re building a page, label, or document that must match an existing source, copying the exact glyph matters more than assigning a broad “meaning.” Always verify how it renders in your target font and platform.
What is the Unicode codepoint for 丹?
丹 is U+F95E (CJK COMPATIBILITY IDEOGRAPH-F95E).
How can I copy 丹 reliably across platforms?
Copy the glyph directly (丹). For code-based use, copy the escaped forms like HTML (丹), CSS (\\F95E), or JavaScript (\\u{F95E}).
Will 丹 always display the same everywhere?
No. Rendering depends on the fonts installed and how that character is supported. If it looks like a box, try a font with CJK compatibility ideograph support.
Is 丹 the same as a standard Chinese/Japanese character?
It’s specifically a CJK compatibility ideograph (U+F95E). Compatibility characters are meant for compatibility with certain standards or legacy text; for exact matches, use this exact codepoint.