Box-drawing characters are a form of semi-graphics widely used in text user interfaces to draw various geometric frames and boxes with monospaced fonts. Although less useful to draw lines and rectangles directly with graphical APIs. However, they are still useful for command-line interfaces and plain-text comments within source code. Used along with box-drawing characters are block elements, shade characters, and terminal graphic characters. These can be used for filling regions of the screen and portraying drop shadows. Below are the Alt codes for the most common box-drawing characters.
Alt 176 | ░ |
Alt 177 | ▒ |
Alt 178 | ▓ |
Alt 179 | │ |
Alt 180 | ┤ |
Alt 181 | ╡ |
Alt 182 | ╢ |
Alt 183 | ╖ |
Alt 184 | ╕ |
Alt 185 | ╣ |
Alt 186 | ║ |
Alt 187 | ╗ |
Alt 188 | ╝ |
Alt 189 | ╜ |
Alt 190 | ╛ |
Alt 191 | ┐ |
Alt 192 | └ |
Alt 193 | ┴ |
Alt 194 | ┬ |
Alt 195 | ├ |
Alt 196 | ─ |
Alt 197 | ┼ |
Alt 198 | ╞ |
Alt 199 | ╟ |
Alt 200 | ╚ |
Alt 201 | ╔ |
Alt 202 | ╩ |
Alt 203 | ╦ |
Alt 204 | ╠ |
Alt 205 | ═ |
Alt 206 | ╬ |
Alt 207 | ╧ |
Alt 208 | ╨ |
Alt 209 | ╤ |
Alt 210 | ╥ |
Alt 211 | ╙ |
Alt 212 | ╘ |
Alt 213 | ╒ |
Alt 214 | ╓ |
Alt 215 | ╫ |
Alt 216 | ╪ |
Alt 217 | ┘ |
Alt 218 | ┌ |
Alt 219 | █ |
Alt 220 | ▄ |
Alt 221 | ▌ |
Alt 222 | ▐ |
Alt 223 | ▀ |
No comments:
Post a Comment