Not too long ago, the Arial Unicode font was a great help to people who
wanted to see all of Unicode on their screens; it used to be available
from Microsoft. (If you have it, don't trash it!) It was huge, iirc 23
megabytes. Nevertheless, although it represents what a must have been a
lot of mork to create, it was not comprehensive, by far.

Macchiato has a delightful Web page...
<http://www.macchiato.com/unicode/show.html>
that uses Javascript to show the glyph for (apparently) *every* Unicode
code point, and at a usefully-large size, as well. I used the Opera
browser zoom to see that at least some of the glyphs it returns are
anti-aliased, using a gray scale.

I'm curious to know where it gets its glyphs from! One thinks there's
something like a complete Unicode font hiding somewhere.

To enter a hex. code point, note their example; the official format, e.g.
U+262E, doesn't work. Use the C-language (?) syntax, e.g. \u262e. I had a
lot of fun with it, wandering at random through my Unicode 3.0 book.

That page, above, is one of several links from their Code Charts page,
<http://www.macchiato.com/unicode/charts.html>

Btw, some links at the top bring pages into Macchiato's site, framing (?)
them; verify your bookmarks carefully if you want to note, for example,
the IBM article.

Someone else might consider transferring this info. to the Qalam ref.
pages.

☮, (U+262E)

--
Nicholas Bodley @#@ Waltham, Mass.
Opera build 3713