![]() ![]() Below that, it shows Related Characters, if any, and scroll down to see Font Variation. With any character selected, the palette shows a larger version with markings for cap height, descender, and left and right edges, as well as details, including the Unicode value, useful for embedding in Web pages by hand. You can click the Settings icon (gear > Customize List) to select additional character sets to show in the list at left, which is handy when you frequently need certain kinds of symbols, like various currencies or technical/keyboard characters. It’s a little reorganized, too, though the current form dates back several versions of OS X. The old Character Palette had font variants at the bottom. ![]() Now, when you select Show Emoji & Symbols the Characters (plural) palette shows up. Note that the category name for the list is fontFamilies (plural). Until a few versions ago, the place where you could see the full panoply of all characters available in various sets (along with versions available in locally loaded fonts) was called the Character Palette with the word Palette in the name. You add font families in theme.json by listing them inside the typography section under the main settings section: Typography options on the root level of the settings section creates presets that you can use for the website and for all blocks. Here’s another part of what’s confusing, too. ![]() Click the tiny palette icon on the emoji palette, and it expands back to full size. ![]()
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