22

In JavaScript I can do this:

foo = "\u2669" // 1/4 note

But I can't do this

foo = "\u1D15D" // full note  -five hex digits

It will be interpreted as "\u1D15" followed by "D"

Are there any workarounds for this?

UPDATE 2012-07-09: The proposal for ECMAScript Harmony now includes support for all Unicode characters.

4

5 Answers 5

33

Try putting the unicode between curly braces: '\u{1D15D}'.

2
  • This is the way to go! More read up here: dmitripavlutin.com/…
    – b00t
    Commented Jan 9, 2019 at 7:17
  • 1
    This doesn't work in regular expressions I don't think, unfortunately. I wish!
    – HareSurf
    Commented Sep 2, 2023 at 21:00
7

In the MDN documentation for fromCharCode, they note that javascript will only naturally handle characters up to 0xFFFF. However, they also have an implementation of a fixed method for fromCharCode that may do what you want (reproduced below):

function fixedFromCharCode (codePt) {
    if (codePt > 0xFFFF) {
        codePt -= 0x10000;
        return String.fromCharCode(0xD800 + (codePt >> 10), 0xDC00 + (codePt & 0x3FF));
    }
    else {
        return String.fromCharCode(codePt);
    }
}

foo = fixedFromCharCode(0x1D15D);
8
  • If you have the correct font installed doing String.fromCharCode( 0x01D15D ) will render you that char. Commented May 16, 2012 at 9:36
  • 1
    Do you have an example of a font for which that works? I'd love to see that fromCharCode now supports codes outside the BMP, but everything I read today seemed to indicate it doesn't. (Also see Frédéric Hamidi's comment above) Commented May 16, 2012 at 10:14
  • I just did a quick test in opera and it spat out the "can't render char"-character. So that lead me to believe that you need the font actually render the character. Commented May 16, 2012 at 13:38
  • 2
    Downloaded the Code2001 font and ran tests. fixedFromCharCode works.
    – itpastorn
    Commented May 16, 2012 at 22:47
  • 1
    Ref: The algorithm explained at Wikipedia
    – itpastorn
    Commented May 17, 2012 at 11:09
1

Nowadays, you can simply use String.fromCodePoint(), as documented in MDN. For instance:

> String.fromCodePoint(0x1f0a1)
"🂡"
0

I did a little checking and it appears that there is no full note near 0x2669. (table of unicode chars)

Although using 0x01D15D does give me a unknown unicode character this could be because I don't have a music font though. Javascript will try to parse as byte as it can and 0x1D15D is 2.5 bytes padding it with a 0 will make it 3 and parsable.

Also this was quite handy: unicode.org/charts/PDF/U1D100.pdf

0

You can use this:

function fromOutsideBMP(cp) {
// 0x01D120
  var x=cp-0x10000;
  var top10=parseInt("11111111110000000000",2);
  var end10=parseInt("1111111111",2);
  var part1=(x&top10)/1024+0xD800;
  var part2=(x&end10)+0xDC00;
  var s=String.fromCharCode(part1)+String.fromCharCode(part2);
  return s;
}

Example:

> fromOutsideBMP(0x01d122)
  "𝄢"
>

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