Cjk Compatibility Ideograph-facb Letter
頋 is a CJK compatibility ideograph character identified as U+FACB.
U+FACB
頋 is a CJK Compatibility Ideograph (code point U+FACB). It may be used when you encounter or need this specific compatibility character. Below are reliable copy and code options.
Cjk Compatibility Ideograph-facb Letter Meaning
頋 is a “CJK Compatibility Ideograph” in the CJK (Chinese/Japanese) block. Its Unicode name is “CJK COMPATIBILITY IDEOGRAPH-FACB” and its code point is U+FACB. Compatibility ideographs are typically included to represent characters in a standardized way across systems that may encode similar glyphs differently. In practice, this character is most often relevant when you are reproducing text that already contains it (such as copied content, legacy data, or round-tripping between fonts and encodings). Its meaning is determined by the text it appears in, rather than by a standalone, widely recognized symbol concept.
Common uses
- •Copying and pasting a character that appears in existing CJK text
- •Preserving legacy or compatibility text when transferring documents
- •Displaying a specific glyph for an identifier or dataset value
- •Using the character in HTML content when the exact code point matters
- •Referencing or validating text data by its Unicode code point (U+FACB)
Examples
頋 CJK Compatibility Ideograph-FACB
- 頋Copy this character: 頋
- 頋The dataset includes the code point U+FACB: 頋
- 頋I need to keep the exact compatibility ideograph: 頋
- 頋Search results show 頋 in the original text
- 頋Legacy text snippet: 頋
Variations
Technical codes
| Unicode | U+FACB | |
| HTML Entity | 頋 | |
| HTML Code | 頋 | |
| CSS | \FACB |
FAQ
What is 頋 called?
It is named “CJK COMPATIBILITY IDEOGRAPH-FACB” in Unicode.
What is the Unicode code point for 頋?
The Unicode code point is U+FACB.
How do I use 頋 in HTML?
Use the HTML entity: 頋.
What does “compatibility ideograph” imply for usage?
It indicates a CJK compatibility character used to represent a specific Unicode character for consistent text interchange; its role depends on the text context where it appears.