Won sign
| ₩ | |
|---|---|
Won sign | |
| In Unicode | U+20A9 ₩ WON SIGN |
| Currency | |
| Currency | South Korean won North Korean won Old Korean won |
| Graphical variants | |
| ₩ | |
| U+FFE6 ₩ FULLWIDTH WON SIGN | |
| Category | |
The won sign ⟨₩⟩, is a currency symbol. It represents the South Korean won, the North Korean won and, unofficially, the old Korean won.
Appearance
[edit ]Its appearance is "W" (the first letter of "Won") with a horizontal strike going through the center. Some fonts display the won sign with two horizontal lines, and others with only one horizontal line. Both forms are used when handwritten.
Encoding
[edit ]The Unicode code point is U+20A9 ₩ WON SIGN: this is valid for either appearance. Additionally, there is a fullwidth character at U+FFE6 ₩ FULLWIDTH WON SIGN (in the block halfwidth and fullwidth forms).
Microsoft Windows
[edit ]In Microsoft Windows code page 949, the position 0x5C is used for the won sign (in Code page 850 (latin script), this codepoint is used for backslash).[1]
In Korean versions of Windows, many fonts (including system fonts) display the backslash character as the won sign. This also applies to the directory separator character (for example, C:₩Program Files₩) and the escape character (₩n).
The same issue (of dual use of the 0x5C code point) is seen with the yen sign in Japanese versions of Windows.
MacOS
[edit ]In macOS, the won sign key inputs U+20A9 ₩ WON SIGN only when in Hangul input mode.
Fictional use
[edit ]In fiction, it is used for the woolong, a fictional currency in anime by Shinichirō Watanabe (Cowboy Bebop , Space Dandy and Carole & Tuesday ), and for "Kinzcash", the currency of the online game Webkinz .
References
[edit ]- ^ "When is a backslash not a backslash?". archives.miloush.net.