Unicode Han Character 'the Yangtze porpoise' (U+4C95)

previous character next character

U+4C95 browser display

the Yangtze porpoise

image of Unicode Han Character 'the Yangtze porpoise' (U+4C95)
Raster image of U+4C95

the Yangtze porpoise

Unicode Data
Name the Yangtze porpoise
Block CJK Unified Ideographs Extension A
Category Letter, Other [Lo]
Script Han (Hani)
Combine 0
BIDI Left-to-Right [L]
Version Unicode 3.0.0 (September, 1999)
Unicode Han Data
kSimplifiedVariant U+2CDB4
kIRG_GSource GKX-1479.24
kIRGKangXi 1479.240
kCangjie NFTCA
kIRG_KSource K3-3668
kKangXi 1479.240
kIRG_TSource T5-7724
kJapanese フ ホ
kMojiJoho MJ006020 MJ006021:E0100 MJ006020:E0101
kRSUnicode 195.13
kDefinition the Yangtze porpoise
kMorohashi 46551:E0100
kIRG_JSource JMJ-006020
kIRGHanyuDaZidian 74718.060
kHanyuPinyin 74718.060:pū
kHanYu 74718.060
kIRG_KPSource KP1-8DB9
kMandarin
kTotalStrokes 24
Encodings
HTML Entity (decimal) 䲕
HTML Entity (hex) 䲕
How to type in Microsoft Windows Alt +4C95
UTF-8 (hex) 0xE4 0xB2 0x95 (e4b295)
UTF-8 (binary) 11100100:10110010:10010101
UTF-16 (hex) 0x4C95 (4c95)
UTF-16 (decimal) 19,605
UTF-32 (hex) 0x00004C95 (4C95)
UTF-32 (decimal) 19,605
C/C++/Java source code "\u4C95"
Python source code u"\u4C95"
More...
Java Data
string.toUpperCase()
string.toLowerCase()
Character.UnicodeBlock CJK_UNIFIED_IDEOGRAPHS_EXTENSION_A
Character.charCount() 1
Character.getDirectionality() DIRECTIONALITY_LEFT_TO_RIGHT [0]
Character.getNumericValue() -1
Character.getType() 5
Character.isDefined() Yes
Character.isDigit() No
Character.isIdentifierIgnorable() No
Character.isISOControl() No
Character.isJavaIdentifierPart() Yes
Character.isJavaIdentifierStart() Yes
Character.isLetter() Yes
Character.isLetterOrDigit() Yes
Character.isLowerCase() No
Character.isMirrored() No
Character.isSpaceChar() No
Character.isSupplementaryCodePoint() No
Character.isTitleCase() No
Character.isUnicodeIdentifierPart() Yes
Character.isUnicodeIdentifierStart() Yes
Character.isUpperCase() No
Character.isValidCodePoint() Yes
Character.isWhitespace() No