When you click on a character the code appears in the bottom left. In Windows, use the Character Map (Start → Programs → Accessories → System Tools → Character Map), choose an appropriate font (for example, MS Mincho has Japanese characters) and turn on the "Advanced view" checkbox.The one you want is the 231st in the list. This brings up a page with 367 kanji containing "go" in their onyomi. For example, on the Unihan search page select "Japanese On" from the menu, type "go" into the box and click on "Lookup". Paste it and remove the surrounding xhtml tags, and what remains is the character code, ready to be submitted to SL. Simply type (or paste) the desired text into a subethaedit window (promoting to UTF8 depending on your settings) and then "Copy as XHTML" (Command-Shift-C). Using SubEthaEdit : SubEthaEdit is a great little program that can take some of the hassle out of character conversions.When you click Preview, the kanji you input turn into code in the edit window and appear as kanji in the preview window.
Search to find your character (in this case the radical is ishi 石 with 5 strokes and 碁 has a further 8 strokes), click on the character, and click on the arrow button in the lower left to open up an extra panel that gives the character code in hexadecimal. The complete source code with history going back 15 years is also available under the MIT License.
#Subethaedit 5 free#
This brings up a floating window for choosing what kind of characters to type in this window click the button in the lower left to bring up the Character Palette. SubEthaEdit 5 Now free and open source The new version 5 of SubEthaEdit, the Apple Design Award winning text editor for macOS, is now available free of charge in the App Store and as direct download.