Company Name: Ziga Kranjec
About: Unicode Pad Pro is the ultimate Unicode character map app for the iPad. Offering
an extensive database of over 155,000 characters, it supports the latest Unicode
16 standard.
The following contact options are available: Pricing Information, Support, General Help, and Press Information/New Coverage (to guage reputation). Discover which options are the fastest to get your customer service issues resolved.
NOTE: If the links below doesn't work for you, Please go directly to the Homepage of Ziga Kranjec
Protect your data and wallet. We investigate the developer's website (Unicode.lacanoid.net), verify they're legit, and uncover hidden scams or complaints.
by Matthew Morrone
Far above everything else available on iOS, but has some odd quirks. As far as I can tell there's no way to reset the catalog font to what it looks like in the notepad; there are several menus for font choice but none of them seem to affect catalog appearance. Also, the default option doesn't seem to do anything either.
The keyboard is also very useful but import/export functionality is broken and it can get rather tedious filling in each key then each shift key one by one.
by StR3tCh_53
This does not show all the glyphs associated with a font. There are other Unicode apps for less that do a much better job at displaying and letting me put together a sample word the way I want. I give this 3 stars because the ability to make custom keyboards is nice, works, and is something others don’t have.
by Fulan
This is an edited review, up from one star to 4. The implementation of the app is, let’s say, laconic. You pretty much have to figure it out UNLESS you discover (which I did in a promptly replied-to email to the developer) that “About Unicode Pro” at the very bottom left of what is functionally the home screen, is also where the documentation hides!!
That too is laconic but using it, if you have a clue about unicode at all (and if not, why are you buying this app?) you can do pretty wonderful things. I have to transliterate Middle Eastern Languages, and with Unicode Pro, some time and some patience, I am now able to enter all the characters I need (and more!) via a custom keyboard. Since I also use a hardware keyboard, this means I can have the transliteration keyboard open on the screen, and type normally until I need some weird character or other, and then, boom! Brilliant!
Five stars when the documentation is labeled “Help” or something similarly obvious. But an elegant little app, on the whole, and invaluable to me.