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How to type a section sign (§) into the Minecraft client


How can I type a Unicode character (for example, em-dash —?)How can I type accentuated characters like ë?What is dconf, what is its function, and how do I use it?How to configure compose key in Ubuntu 14.04How to fix laggy mouse and keyboard on Ubuntu 10.04 LTS 64bit?Pasting from vim in terminal to Google Docs (Firefox + Vimperator) - need to understandMinecraft Fullscreen not workingHow to install Minecraft (Client)How to view a particular unicode character?How to type accent grave without letter or alt in terminal?Enable/disable mousekeys via command lineHow to type Greek characters with a breathing and accentxdotool - how do I select text using shift+Home or shift+End?Media keys not working in Clementine






.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;








2















So in Minecraft, the section sign (§) can be useful to make colors in text and so on. However, I can't seem to type it. I've tried pasting the character in using Ctrl-V as well as middle mouse. I've even tried using xdotool type "§", but it just doesn't register, even though using xdotool type "foobar" will work. Is Minecraft perhaps just filtering out that character or something on Linux?










share|improve this question
























  • Find out the utf code for that character and use ctrl shift u shortcut. See askubuntu.com/a/364/295286

    – Sergiy Kolodyazhnyy
    4 hours ago











  • @Serg Its codepoint is A7

    – wjandrea
    13 mins ago


















2















So in Minecraft, the section sign (§) can be useful to make colors in text and so on. However, I can't seem to type it. I've tried pasting the character in using Ctrl-V as well as middle mouse. I've even tried using xdotool type "§", but it just doesn't register, even though using xdotool type "foobar" will work. Is Minecraft perhaps just filtering out that character or something on Linux?










share|improve this question
























  • Find out the utf code for that character and use ctrl shift u shortcut. See askubuntu.com/a/364/295286

    – Sergiy Kolodyazhnyy
    4 hours ago











  • @Serg Its codepoint is A7

    – wjandrea
    13 mins ago














2












2








2








So in Minecraft, the section sign (§) can be useful to make colors in text and so on. However, I can't seem to type it. I've tried pasting the character in using Ctrl-V as well as middle mouse. I've even tried using xdotool type "§", but it just doesn't register, even though using xdotool type "foobar" will work. Is Minecraft perhaps just filtering out that character or something on Linux?










share|improve this question
















So in Minecraft, the section sign (§) can be useful to make colors in text and so on. However, I can't seem to type it. I've tried pasting the character in using Ctrl-V as well as middle mouse. I've even tried using xdotool type "§", but it just doesn't register, even though using xdotool type "foobar" will work. Is Minecraft perhaps just filtering out that character or something on Linux?







keyboard games minecraft






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 15 mins ago









wjandrea

9,61442765




9,61442765










asked 5 hours ago









deltaraydeltaray

15610




15610












  • Find out the utf code for that character and use ctrl shift u shortcut. See askubuntu.com/a/364/295286

    – Sergiy Kolodyazhnyy
    4 hours ago











  • @Serg Its codepoint is A7

    – wjandrea
    13 mins ago


















  • Find out the utf code for that character and use ctrl shift u shortcut. See askubuntu.com/a/364/295286

    – Sergiy Kolodyazhnyy
    4 hours ago











  • @Serg Its codepoint is A7

    – wjandrea
    13 mins ago

















Find out the utf code for that character and use ctrl shift u shortcut. See askubuntu.com/a/364/295286

– Sergiy Kolodyazhnyy
4 hours ago





Find out the utf code for that character and use ctrl shift u shortcut. See askubuntu.com/a/364/295286

– Sergiy Kolodyazhnyy
4 hours ago













@Serg Its codepoint is A7

– wjandrea
13 mins ago






@Serg Its codepoint is A7

– wjandrea
13 mins ago











1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















2














to type special characters in the terminal you need to use the compose key



To configure the compose key on Ubuntu, you need to install dconf and you can find the setting
in the package dconf/org/gnome/desktop/input-source/xkboptions




From Ubuntu 14.04




dconf → org → gnome → desktop → input-sources → xkboptions



e.g. to set the Alt Gr key as compose:




['compose:ralt']


Then you can use the compose key to type that special character.




By pressing Compose, some key, some key… in sequence, you can input characters. I have my compose key set to Menu; to type a © (copyright symbol), I would use Menu, o, c.



A full list of X compose key combinations can be found online (200 KiB), or locally in /usr/share/X11/locale/en_US.UTF-8/Compose.




The character "§" is included in the below list



XCOMM Other symbols
<Multi_key> <s> <o> : "§" section # SECTION SIGN
<Multi_key> <o> <s> : "§" section # SECTION SIGN
<Multi_key> <S> <O> : "§" section # SECTION SIGN
<Multi_key> <O> <S> : "§" section # SECTION SIGN
<Multi_key> <s> <exclam> : "§" section # SECTION SIGN
<Multi_key> <S> <exclam> : "§" section # SECTION SIGN
<Multi_key> <Cyrillic_pe> <Cyrillic_a> : "§" section # SECTION SIGN


The other option is typing the Unicode character as suggested from Sergiy Kolodyazhnyy.



The unicode character is available in this table






share|improve this answer

























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    1 Answer
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    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    2














    to type special characters in the terminal you need to use the compose key



    To configure the compose key on Ubuntu, you need to install dconf and you can find the setting
    in the package dconf/org/gnome/desktop/input-source/xkboptions




    From Ubuntu 14.04




    dconf → org → gnome → desktop → input-sources → xkboptions



    e.g. to set the Alt Gr key as compose:




    ['compose:ralt']


    Then you can use the compose key to type that special character.




    By pressing Compose, some key, some key… in sequence, you can input characters. I have my compose key set to Menu; to type a © (copyright symbol), I would use Menu, o, c.



    A full list of X compose key combinations can be found online (200 KiB), or locally in /usr/share/X11/locale/en_US.UTF-8/Compose.




    The character "§" is included in the below list



    XCOMM Other symbols
    <Multi_key> <s> <o> : "§" section # SECTION SIGN
    <Multi_key> <o> <s> : "§" section # SECTION SIGN
    <Multi_key> <S> <O> : "§" section # SECTION SIGN
    <Multi_key> <O> <S> : "§" section # SECTION SIGN
    <Multi_key> <s> <exclam> : "§" section # SECTION SIGN
    <Multi_key> <S> <exclam> : "§" section # SECTION SIGN
    <Multi_key> <Cyrillic_pe> <Cyrillic_a> : "§" section # SECTION SIGN


    The other option is typing the Unicode character as suggested from Sergiy Kolodyazhnyy.



    The unicode character is available in this table






    share|improve this answer





























      2














      to type special characters in the terminal you need to use the compose key



      To configure the compose key on Ubuntu, you need to install dconf and you can find the setting
      in the package dconf/org/gnome/desktop/input-source/xkboptions




      From Ubuntu 14.04




      dconf → org → gnome → desktop → input-sources → xkboptions



      e.g. to set the Alt Gr key as compose:




      ['compose:ralt']


      Then you can use the compose key to type that special character.




      By pressing Compose, some key, some key… in sequence, you can input characters. I have my compose key set to Menu; to type a © (copyright symbol), I would use Menu, o, c.



      A full list of X compose key combinations can be found online (200 KiB), or locally in /usr/share/X11/locale/en_US.UTF-8/Compose.




      The character "§" is included in the below list



      XCOMM Other symbols
      <Multi_key> <s> <o> : "§" section # SECTION SIGN
      <Multi_key> <o> <s> : "§" section # SECTION SIGN
      <Multi_key> <S> <O> : "§" section # SECTION SIGN
      <Multi_key> <O> <S> : "§" section # SECTION SIGN
      <Multi_key> <s> <exclam> : "§" section # SECTION SIGN
      <Multi_key> <S> <exclam> : "§" section # SECTION SIGN
      <Multi_key> <Cyrillic_pe> <Cyrillic_a> : "§" section # SECTION SIGN


      The other option is typing the Unicode character as suggested from Sergiy Kolodyazhnyy.



      The unicode character is available in this table






      share|improve this answer



























        2












        2








        2







        to type special characters in the terminal you need to use the compose key



        To configure the compose key on Ubuntu, you need to install dconf and you can find the setting
        in the package dconf/org/gnome/desktop/input-source/xkboptions




        From Ubuntu 14.04




        dconf → org → gnome → desktop → input-sources → xkboptions



        e.g. to set the Alt Gr key as compose:




        ['compose:ralt']


        Then you can use the compose key to type that special character.




        By pressing Compose, some key, some key… in sequence, you can input characters. I have my compose key set to Menu; to type a © (copyright symbol), I would use Menu, o, c.



        A full list of X compose key combinations can be found online (200 KiB), or locally in /usr/share/X11/locale/en_US.UTF-8/Compose.




        The character "§" is included in the below list



        XCOMM Other symbols
        <Multi_key> <s> <o> : "§" section # SECTION SIGN
        <Multi_key> <o> <s> : "§" section # SECTION SIGN
        <Multi_key> <S> <O> : "§" section # SECTION SIGN
        <Multi_key> <O> <S> : "§" section # SECTION SIGN
        <Multi_key> <s> <exclam> : "§" section # SECTION SIGN
        <Multi_key> <S> <exclam> : "§" section # SECTION SIGN
        <Multi_key> <Cyrillic_pe> <Cyrillic_a> : "§" section # SECTION SIGN


        The other option is typing the Unicode character as suggested from Sergiy Kolodyazhnyy.



        The unicode character is available in this table






        share|improve this answer















        to type special characters in the terminal you need to use the compose key



        To configure the compose key on Ubuntu, you need to install dconf and you can find the setting
        in the package dconf/org/gnome/desktop/input-source/xkboptions




        From Ubuntu 14.04




        dconf → org → gnome → desktop → input-sources → xkboptions



        e.g. to set the Alt Gr key as compose:




        ['compose:ralt']


        Then you can use the compose key to type that special character.




        By pressing Compose, some key, some key… in sequence, you can input characters. I have my compose key set to Menu; to type a © (copyright symbol), I would use Menu, o, c.



        A full list of X compose key combinations can be found online (200 KiB), or locally in /usr/share/X11/locale/en_US.UTF-8/Compose.




        The character "§" is included in the below list



        XCOMM Other symbols
        <Multi_key> <s> <o> : "§" section # SECTION SIGN
        <Multi_key> <o> <s> : "§" section # SECTION SIGN
        <Multi_key> <S> <O> : "§" section # SECTION SIGN
        <Multi_key> <O> <S> : "§" section # SECTION SIGN
        <Multi_key> <s> <exclam> : "§" section # SECTION SIGN
        <Multi_key> <S> <exclam> : "§" section # SECTION SIGN
        <Multi_key> <Cyrillic_pe> <Cyrillic_a> : "§" section # SECTION SIGN


        The other option is typing the Unicode character as suggested from Sergiy Kolodyazhnyy.



        The unicode character is available in this table







        share|improve this answer














        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer








        edited 3 hours ago

























        answered 3 hours ago









        Fabrizio BertoglioFabrizio Bertoglio

        218




        218



























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