U+7BAC

(unnamed character)

Lo — Other Letter
Han
Basic Multilingual Plane (BMP)
31660

Encoding Table

This table shows the exact bytes used to represent U+7BAC in each encoding. Unicode encodings (UTF-8, UTF-16, UTF-32) support every character; legacy encodings only cover a limited character set and show "not supported" when a character falls outside their range.

Encoding Bytes (Hex) Bytes (Decimal) Byte count
UTF-8 E7 AE AC 231 174 172 3
UTF-16 LE AC 7B 172 123 2
UTF-16 BE 7B AC 123 172 2
UTF-32 LE AC 7B 00 00 172 123 0 0 4
UTF-32 BE 00 00 7B AC 0 0 123 172 4
ASCII not supported
Latin-1 (ISO-8859-1) not supported
Windows-1252 not supported
ISO-8859-2 (Latin-2) not supported
ISO-8859-5 (Cyrillic) not supported
KOI8-R not supported
Shift-JIS not supported
EUC-JP 8F D2 BE 143 210 190 3
GBK F3 E8 243 232 2
Big5 E6 D9 230 217 2

Escape Sequences

How to reference this character in source code, markup, and URLs.

none
箬
箬
\7BAC
\u7BAC
%E7%AE%AC
\u7bac
31660

View the glyph in different fonts and scripts on our sibling site.

View U+7BAC on CharLookup.com ↗

UTF-8 Binary Breakdown

UTF-8 encodes this character as 3 bytes. The leading 1110 prefix on byte 1 signals a 3-byte sequence. Bytes 2 and 3 begin with 10 to mark them as continuation bytes.

Byte 1
1 1 1 0 0 1 1 1
E7
·
Byte 2
1 0 1 0 1 1 1 0
AE
·
Byte 3
1 0 1 0 1 1 0 0
AC
UTF-8: E7 AE AC · 3 bytes · Codepoint U+7BAC

Unicode Properties

Introduced in Unicode 1.1

Nearby Characters in CJK Unified Ideographs