Thanks a lot for looking into my admittedly exotic question.

I will try the font op@ suggested, but wonder about noto (which was my pick).

Am 16. Dez. 2023, 04:44, um 04:44, Nowarez Market <my2...@has.im> schrieb:
>
>I neither can't see the char you show us but about the support of the
>unicode\Chinese in OpenBSD..
>
>I have the font Noto in my system and I own the following in the
>.xinitrc file:
>
>export LC_CTYPE=zh_CN.UTF-8
>
>export GTK_IM_MODULE=xim
>export QT_IM_MODULE=xim
>export GLFW_IM_MODULE=ibus
>export XMODIFIERS="@im=SCIM"
>/usr/local/bin/scim -d &
>
>xconsole -iconic &
>
>/usr/local/bin/startxfce4
>
>Indeed I can now do the following from xfce4-terminal:
>
>wiz$ pwd
>/home/wiz
>wiz$ ls
>
>wiz$ touch 你好.txt
>wiz$ ls
>你好.txt
>
>Please not that xfce4-terminal encoding is configured on UTF-8 but it
>can use any frontend font like "Monospace Regular 10" and at need seems
>to pick up the right font.
>
>I want to thank everyone worked on the unicode support at system level
>for the nice eandover, appreciated.
>
>
>== Nowarez Market
>
>
>
>Robert Palm <develo...@robert-palm.de> wrote:
>
>> I am playing with UTF-8 characters and try to display, e.g. a lock
>> symbol https://www.compart.com/en/unicode/U+1F512
>>
>> I use xfce and set the terminal default character encoding to UTF-8
>> in advanced settings.
>>
>> Still I cannot get it displayed in xterm or emacs, e.g. by simply
>> trying to copy paste from the website :-/
>>
>> Emacs gives a box and xterm a blank.
>>
>> Any hints? Thanks!

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