PUZZLE PIECE Unicode characters?

Is there a Unicode symbol for puzzle pieces? There are a lot of dingbats that are rarely used in Unicode, I don’t remember it a bit-but I suspect that there is another one that is the same. However, I can’t find something similar in gucharmap because it may be incomplete (missing Klingon!). None of the tables in unicode.org/charts/-too many manual viewing.

So, has anyone seen PUZZLE characters?

Alternative question: What else will you use as a symbol for the application plug-in?

Unicode Consortium doesn’t list a puzzle character.

And, even if it does, I’m not sure you should use it. It relies on the glyphs available in the font you are distributing, which is far from certain, especially for more obscure characters.

For me, this is the canonical “plugin icon”:

Plugin Icon http://www.navy.mil.za/navyband/images/plugin_icon.png

I can think of two routes:

>If you sell it as a character, you can use Fontlab or something similar to create your own font, and then distribute the font with your app. It turns out it It’s easier than it looks. The advantage of this is that you can treat the “plugin” picture as another piece of text.> A better way is to use graphics. It is easier to include graphics, if you try to use it for icons or buttons, It also works normally.

Are there any Unicode symbols that represent puzzles? There are a lot of dingbats that are rarely used in Unicode, I don’t remember it a bit-but I suspect that there is another one that is the same. However, I can’t find something similar in gucharmap because it may be incomplete (missing Klingon!). None of the tables in unicode.org/charts/-too many manual viewing.

So, has anyone seen PUZZLE characters?

Alternative question: What else will you use as a symbol for the application plug-in?

Unicode Consortium doesn’t list a puzzle character.

And, even if it does, I’m not sure about you It should be used. It depends on the glyphs available in the font you are distributing, which is far from certain, especially for more obscure characters.

For me, this is the canonical “plugin” Icon”:

Plugin Icon http://www.navy.mil.za/navyband/images/plugin_icon.png

I can think of two routes:

< p>>If you sell it as a character, you can use Fontlab or something similar to create your own font, and then distribute that font with your app. It turns out that it is easier than it seems. The advantage of this is, You can think of the “plug-in” picture as another piece of text.>A better way is to use graphics. It is easier to include graphics, and it will work fine if you try to use it for icons or buttons.

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