uniname

Tools for finding out what is in a Unicode file

Install

All systems
curl cmd.cat/uniname.sh
Debian Debian
apt-get install uniutils
Ubuntu
apt-get install uniutils
image/svg+xml Kali Linux
apt-get install uniutils
Windows (WSL2)
sudo apt-get update sudo apt-get install uniutils
OS X
brew install uniutils
Raspbian
apt-get install uniutils

uniutils

Tools for finding out what is in a Unicode file

Useful tools when working with Unicode files when one doesn't know the writing system, doesn't have the necessary font, needs to inspect invisible characters, needs to find out whether characters have been combined or in what order they occur, or needs statistics on which characters occur. * uniname defaults to printing the character offset of each character, its byte offset, its hex code value, its encoding, the glyph itself, and its name. It may also be used to validate UTF-8 input. * unidesc reports the character ranges to which different portions of the text belong. It can also be used to identify Unicode encodings (e.g. UTF-16be) flagged by magic numbers. * unihist generates a histogram of the characters in its input. * ExplicateUTF8 is intended for debugging or for learning about Unicode. It determines and explains the validity of a sequence of bytes as a UTF8 encoding. * utf8lookup provides a handy way to look up Unicode characters from the command line. * unireverse reverse each line of UTF-8 input character-by-character.