I favor using these when screen real estate is at a premium Example: Okay, so, to further clarify: MacOS has a set of glyphs available to it by default, all built-in like, that it applies when rendering text. I mean, it's gotta be stored SOMEWHERE on the drive, right? Nobody else who's not on my MBP need ever see it I just wanna know if I can override or modify that table. The objective here is to be able to add custom glyphs as labels to icons, or the system-ui for my own use. Presuppose I have the relevant software to create and save the glyph in any format required, raster or vector, including the ability to make it into any flavor of font or graphic file. This is for personal use on my own system. I'm even fine if the value of the glyph doesn't align with the visual output (so if I were to overwrite the letter "e" with billiard ball - this is a "'as a for instance," NOT my plan, lol - it would still sort between "d" and "f" still - this is not a requirement, just saying I wouldn't care). My question is, is there a way I can take a glyph I've created in, say, photoshop or illustrator and either supplant/replace one of the system glyphs, or somehow bootstrap it into one of the Private Use Area (E000) blocks inside the unicode table? I totally understand this would be a local only modification and that nobody else would see it, as they would lack the custom glyph. Okay, so like, I'm aware the Character Viewer (⌘ + ⌃ + space) is displaying a system index of the full supported Unicode set of chars.
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