![]() ![]() The most likely thing she’s experiencing is the minimized option for the Characters palette, which is the floating window that shows up when you select the Input system menu’s Show Emoji & Symbols option. Click the tiny palette in its upper right to restore the Characters palette. ![]() The Emoji palette hides the full range of characters available, showing just emoji and some symbols. Why don’t I go ahead answer Lynn’s actual question, then? ![]() Astute commenter “xploraiswakco” very politely noted that I had answered her question sort of, but not really the core of what she was asking: the Character Viewer had changed to the Emoji & Symbols palette, and no longer has the same approach to showing characters (not key combinations) in every font. Where can I find all the characters within a font so I can do what I used to do?Įxcept I didn’t! I read her question as asking about key combinations, and pointed her to the Keyboard Viewer. In El Capitan, that icon produces nothing but emoji and symbols. In the old system, I could click on the icon in the menu bar and see all the characters within any font that I chose, then double-click it to add it to my document. In a recent Mac 911, I answered Lynn Garwood’s question about character selection when she upgraded from Mavericks to El Capitan: ![]()
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