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How to type dʒ symbol (IPA) on Mac?


mapping external keyboard keys to mac keysHow to type blank character with Mac keyboard?Is it possible to type in macron (e.g. “ā”) without using U.S. Extended Keyboard?How to type a capital letter from the extended Latin alphabet in OS XHow can I type the “@” symbol via VNC with a PC keyboard?How does one type circumflexes in El Capitan?How Do I Type with IPA (International Phonetic Alphabet)?Which keyboard layout is this?Has Apple ditched the enter key symbol in their mac devices international keyboard?How can I type Lithuanian stress characters (e.g., ą́, ė̃, m̃)?






.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;








6















I want to type in dʒ on macOS but I don't know how I can type it. I tried ⌥ + keys but it seems that none of the keys is mapped to the symbol. It's not listed on this page.



I use the US Extended keyboard: So how can I type this symbol?










share|improve this question
























  • For general-purpose IPA input, you may be interested in <i2speak.com> (no affiliation).

    – wchargin
    Apr 8 at 2:08

















6















I want to type in dʒ on macOS but I don't know how I can type it. I tried ⌥ + keys but it seems that none of the keys is mapped to the symbol. It's not listed on this page.



I use the US Extended keyboard: So how can I type this symbol?










share|improve this question
























  • For general-purpose IPA input, you may be interested in <i2speak.com> (no affiliation).

    – wchargin
    Apr 8 at 2:08













6












6








6








I want to type in dʒ on macOS but I don't know how I can type it. I tried ⌥ + keys but it seems that none of the keys is mapped to the symbol. It's not listed on this page.



I use the US Extended keyboard: So how can I type this symbol?










share|improve this question
















I want to type in dʒ on macOS but I don't know how I can type it. I tried ⌥ + keys but it seems that none of the keys is mapped to the symbol. It's not listed on this page.



I use the US Extended keyboard: So how can I type this symbol?







macos mac keyboard






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Apr 7 at 20:24









bmike

163k46293634




163k46293634










asked Apr 7 at 20:20









BlaszardBlaszard

79341938




79341938












  • For general-purpose IPA input, you may be interested in <i2speak.com> (no affiliation).

    – wchargin
    Apr 8 at 2:08

















  • For general-purpose IPA input, you may be interested in <i2speak.com> (no affiliation).

    – wchargin
    Apr 8 at 2:08
















For general-purpose IPA input, you may be interested in <i2speak.com> (no affiliation).

– wchargin
Apr 8 at 2:08





For general-purpose IPA input, you may be interested in <i2speak.com> (no affiliation).

– wchargin
Apr 8 at 2:08










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















5














With ABC (formerly US) Extended, ʒ is made by typing option-shift ; and then z.



In general, to see which key does what, use Keyboard Viewer.



More info about ABC Extended can be found here. And here.






share|improve this answer

























  • Thanks and do you know which key to type in Dvorak? It seems different and has no such symbol with option and shift...

    – Blaszard
    Apr 7 at 21:19











  • Or I rather want to know a way to detect which key to type in based on the symbol, if that is possible, since there are still more symbols that I don't know how to type...

    – Blaszard
    Apr 7 at 21:21











  • @Blaszard Only ABC Extended can do such things. You can use Keyboard Viewer to see all the possibilities provided by the Dvorak layout. If you want to make a custom version of Dvorak which has the special characters you need, a good tool is Ukelele scripts.sil.org/ukelele (temporarily down unfortunately)

    – Tom Gewecke
    Apr 7 at 21:25











  • Ohh that's sad. Thanks.

    – Blaszard
    Apr 7 at 21:27







  • 1





    @Blaszard Your second comment seems to indicate you did not read the part about Keyboard Viewer or click on the link there. Another way to input such characters is via Character Viewer. support.apple.com/guide/mac-help/…

    – Tom Gewecke
    Apr 7 at 21:27



















4














If you know the Unicode name of the character, you can use ⌘ - ^ - Space to bring up a character search. This character is called Ezh:



screenshot of character selector



Usually this is used for Emoji, but as you can see, it works for any character.






share|improve this answer























  • That’s nice to know, thanks!

    – Blaszard
    Apr 9 at 14:57


















2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes








2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









5














With ABC (formerly US) Extended, ʒ is made by typing option-shift ; and then z.



In general, to see which key does what, use Keyboard Viewer.



More info about ABC Extended can be found here. And here.






share|improve this answer

























  • Thanks and do you know which key to type in Dvorak? It seems different and has no such symbol with option and shift...

    – Blaszard
    Apr 7 at 21:19











  • Or I rather want to know a way to detect which key to type in based on the symbol, if that is possible, since there are still more symbols that I don't know how to type...

    – Blaszard
    Apr 7 at 21:21











  • @Blaszard Only ABC Extended can do such things. You can use Keyboard Viewer to see all the possibilities provided by the Dvorak layout. If you want to make a custom version of Dvorak which has the special characters you need, a good tool is Ukelele scripts.sil.org/ukelele (temporarily down unfortunately)

    – Tom Gewecke
    Apr 7 at 21:25











  • Ohh that's sad. Thanks.

    – Blaszard
    Apr 7 at 21:27







  • 1





    @Blaszard Your second comment seems to indicate you did not read the part about Keyboard Viewer or click on the link there. Another way to input such characters is via Character Viewer. support.apple.com/guide/mac-help/…

    – Tom Gewecke
    Apr 7 at 21:27
















5














With ABC (formerly US) Extended, ʒ is made by typing option-shift ; and then z.



In general, to see which key does what, use Keyboard Viewer.



More info about ABC Extended can be found here. And here.






share|improve this answer

























  • Thanks and do you know which key to type in Dvorak? It seems different and has no such symbol with option and shift...

    – Blaszard
    Apr 7 at 21:19











  • Or I rather want to know a way to detect which key to type in based on the symbol, if that is possible, since there are still more symbols that I don't know how to type...

    – Blaszard
    Apr 7 at 21:21











  • @Blaszard Only ABC Extended can do such things. You can use Keyboard Viewer to see all the possibilities provided by the Dvorak layout. If you want to make a custom version of Dvorak which has the special characters you need, a good tool is Ukelele scripts.sil.org/ukelele (temporarily down unfortunately)

    – Tom Gewecke
    Apr 7 at 21:25











  • Ohh that's sad. Thanks.

    – Blaszard
    Apr 7 at 21:27







  • 1





    @Blaszard Your second comment seems to indicate you did not read the part about Keyboard Viewer or click on the link there. Another way to input such characters is via Character Viewer. support.apple.com/guide/mac-help/…

    – Tom Gewecke
    Apr 7 at 21:27














5












5








5







With ABC (formerly US) Extended, ʒ is made by typing option-shift ; and then z.



In general, to see which key does what, use Keyboard Viewer.



More info about ABC Extended can be found here. And here.






share|improve this answer















With ABC (formerly US) Extended, ʒ is made by typing option-shift ; and then z.



In general, to see which key does what, use Keyboard Viewer.



More info about ABC Extended can be found here. And here.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Apr 8 at 2:42

























answered Apr 7 at 21:12









Tom GeweckeTom Gewecke

12.1k31934




12.1k31934












  • Thanks and do you know which key to type in Dvorak? It seems different and has no such symbol with option and shift...

    – Blaszard
    Apr 7 at 21:19











  • Or I rather want to know a way to detect which key to type in based on the symbol, if that is possible, since there are still more symbols that I don't know how to type...

    – Blaszard
    Apr 7 at 21:21











  • @Blaszard Only ABC Extended can do such things. You can use Keyboard Viewer to see all the possibilities provided by the Dvorak layout. If you want to make a custom version of Dvorak which has the special characters you need, a good tool is Ukelele scripts.sil.org/ukelele (temporarily down unfortunately)

    – Tom Gewecke
    Apr 7 at 21:25











  • Ohh that's sad. Thanks.

    – Blaszard
    Apr 7 at 21:27







  • 1





    @Blaszard Your second comment seems to indicate you did not read the part about Keyboard Viewer or click on the link there. Another way to input such characters is via Character Viewer. support.apple.com/guide/mac-help/…

    – Tom Gewecke
    Apr 7 at 21:27


















  • Thanks and do you know which key to type in Dvorak? It seems different and has no such symbol with option and shift...

    – Blaszard
    Apr 7 at 21:19











  • Or I rather want to know a way to detect which key to type in based on the symbol, if that is possible, since there are still more symbols that I don't know how to type...

    – Blaszard
    Apr 7 at 21:21











  • @Blaszard Only ABC Extended can do such things. You can use Keyboard Viewer to see all the possibilities provided by the Dvorak layout. If you want to make a custom version of Dvorak which has the special characters you need, a good tool is Ukelele scripts.sil.org/ukelele (temporarily down unfortunately)

    – Tom Gewecke
    Apr 7 at 21:25











  • Ohh that's sad. Thanks.

    – Blaszard
    Apr 7 at 21:27







  • 1





    @Blaszard Your second comment seems to indicate you did not read the part about Keyboard Viewer or click on the link there. Another way to input such characters is via Character Viewer. support.apple.com/guide/mac-help/…

    – Tom Gewecke
    Apr 7 at 21:27

















Thanks and do you know which key to type in Dvorak? It seems different and has no such symbol with option and shift...

– Blaszard
Apr 7 at 21:19





Thanks and do you know which key to type in Dvorak? It seems different and has no such symbol with option and shift...

– Blaszard
Apr 7 at 21:19













Or I rather want to know a way to detect which key to type in based on the symbol, if that is possible, since there are still more symbols that I don't know how to type...

– Blaszard
Apr 7 at 21:21





Or I rather want to know a way to detect which key to type in based on the symbol, if that is possible, since there are still more symbols that I don't know how to type...

– Blaszard
Apr 7 at 21:21













@Blaszard Only ABC Extended can do such things. You can use Keyboard Viewer to see all the possibilities provided by the Dvorak layout. If you want to make a custom version of Dvorak which has the special characters you need, a good tool is Ukelele scripts.sil.org/ukelele (temporarily down unfortunately)

– Tom Gewecke
Apr 7 at 21:25





@Blaszard Only ABC Extended can do such things. You can use Keyboard Viewer to see all the possibilities provided by the Dvorak layout. If you want to make a custom version of Dvorak which has the special characters you need, a good tool is Ukelele scripts.sil.org/ukelele (temporarily down unfortunately)

– Tom Gewecke
Apr 7 at 21:25













Ohh that's sad. Thanks.

– Blaszard
Apr 7 at 21:27






Ohh that's sad. Thanks.

– Blaszard
Apr 7 at 21:27





1




1





@Blaszard Your second comment seems to indicate you did not read the part about Keyboard Viewer or click on the link there. Another way to input such characters is via Character Viewer. support.apple.com/guide/mac-help/…

– Tom Gewecke
Apr 7 at 21:27






@Blaszard Your second comment seems to indicate you did not read the part about Keyboard Viewer or click on the link there. Another way to input such characters is via Character Viewer. support.apple.com/guide/mac-help/…

– Tom Gewecke
Apr 7 at 21:27














4














If you know the Unicode name of the character, you can use ⌘ - ^ - Space to bring up a character search. This character is called Ezh:



screenshot of character selector



Usually this is used for Emoji, but as you can see, it works for any character.






share|improve this answer























  • That’s nice to know, thanks!

    – Blaszard
    Apr 9 at 14:57















4














If you know the Unicode name of the character, you can use ⌘ - ^ - Space to bring up a character search. This character is called Ezh:



screenshot of character selector



Usually this is used for Emoji, but as you can see, it works for any character.






share|improve this answer























  • That’s nice to know, thanks!

    – Blaszard
    Apr 9 at 14:57













4












4








4







If you know the Unicode name of the character, you can use ⌘ - ^ - Space to bring up a character search. This character is called Ezh:



screenshot of character selector



Usually this is used for Emoji, but as you can see, it works for any character.






share|improve this answer













If you know the Unicode name of the character, you can use ⌘ - ^ - Space to bring up a character search. This character is called Ezh:



screenshot of character selector



Usually this is used for Emoji, but as you can see, it works for any character.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Apr 8 at 3:14









miken32miken32

6921414




6921414












  • That’s nice to know, thanks!

    – Blaszard
    Apr 9 at 14:57

















  • That’s nice to know, thanks!

    – Blaszard
    Apr 9 at 14:57
















That’s nice to know, thanks!

– Blaszard
Apr 9 at 14:57





That’s nice to know, thanks!

– Blaszard
Apr 9 at 14:57



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