DŽ

Latin Capital Letter Dz With Caron

U+01C4
BMP Unicode 1.1
Character DŽ
Decimal DŽ
Hex DŽ

Classification

Unicode properties assigned to this character by the Unicode Consortium. The codepoint is its unique numeric identifier. Category, block, and script determine how text systems render and process it.

Codepoint
U+01C4
Decimal
452
Plane
BMP — Basic Multilingual Plane
Category
Uppercase Letter (Lu)
Script
Latin
Bidi class
L Left-to-Right
East Asian Width
N Narrow
Properties
Alphabetic ID Start ID Continue
Lowercase
dž U+01C6

Looks Like (Confusables)

Characters that are visually similar — relevant for security, font design, and homoglyph detection.

U+0044 U+017D

Encodings & Escape Sequences

Every Unicode character can be represented in multiple ways depending on context. HTML entities let you embed it safely in web pages. UTF-8 bytes are what gets stored on disk and sent over the network. Escape sequences let you reference it in source code without pasting the raw glyph. All formats below refer to the same character — Latin Capital Letter Dz With Caron.

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Format Value
HTML Decimal
DŽ
HTML Hex
DŽ
UTF-8 Hex Bytes
C7 84
UTF-16 Hex Bytes
01 C4
UTF-32 Hex
000001C4
CSS Escape
\1C4
JavaScript Escape
\u01C4
Python Escape
\u01C4
URL Encoded
%C7%84
Have a string containing this character? Decode it to see every codepoint. UnicodeDecoder →

Normalization Forms

Unicode defines four normalization forms that affect how characters with diacritics, compatibility variants, and combining marks are represented. This character has a non-trivial normalization — the forms below differ from its codepoint. Mismatched normalization is the most common cause of failed string comparisons across systems.

NFC = Canonical Decomposition then Canonical Composition (preferred for storage) · NFD = Canonical Decomposition · NFKC/NFKD = Compatibility forms (fold variants like fi → fi)

Decomposition

This character can be broken down into a sequence of simpler Unicode codepoints. This is a compatibility decomposition — the character is a stylistic or semantic variant of its components, not an exact equivalent.