Outside of the characters that you can type on your keyboard, there are a lot of other characters you can print on your screen. I've created a script to allow you to check out what the font you're using has available for you. The main command you need to use to utilize these characters is "echo -e". The "-e" switch tells echo to enable interpretation of backslash-escaped characters. What you see when you look at octal 200-400 will be very different with a VGA font from what you will see with a standard Linux font. Be warned that some of these escape sequences have odd effects on your terminal, and I haven't tried to prevent them from doing whatever they do. The linedraw and block characters that are used heavily by the Bashprompt project are between octal 260 and 337 in the VGA fonts.
#!/bin/bash # Script: escgen function usage { echo -e "\033[1;34mescgen\033[0m <lower_octal_value> [<higher_octal_value>]" echo " Octal escape sequence generator: print all octal escape sequences" echo " between the lower value and the upper value. If a second value" echo " isn't supplied, print eight characters." echo " 1998 - Giles Orr, no warranty." exit 1 } if [ "$#" -eq "0" ] then echo -e "\033[1;31mPlease supply one or two values.\033[0m" usage fi let lower_val=${1} if [ "$#" -eq "1" ] then # If they don't supply a closing value, give them eight characters. upper_val=$(echo -e "obase=8 \n ibase=8 \n $lower_val+10 \n quit" | bc) else let upper_val=${2} fi if [ "$#" -gt "2" ] then echo -e "\033[1;31mPlease supply two values.\033[0m" echo usage fi if [ "${lower_val}" -gt "${upper_val}" ] then echo -e "\033[1;31m${lower_val} is larger than ${upper_val}." echo usage fi if [ "${upper_val}" -gt "777" ] then echo -e "\033[1;31mValues cannot exceed 777.\033[0m" echo usage fi let i=$lower_val let line_count=1 let limit=$upper_val while [ "$i" -lt "$limit" ] do octal_escape="\\$i" echo -en "$i:'$octal_escape' " if [ "$line_count" -gt "7" ] then echo # Put a hard return in. let line_count=0 fi let i=$(echo -e "obase=8 \n ibase=8 \n $i+1 \n quit" | bc) let line_count=$line_count+1 done echo |
You can also use xfd to display all the characters in an X font, with the command xfd -fn <fontname>. Clicking on any given character will give you lots of information about that character, including its octal value. The script given above will be useful on the console, and if you aren't sure of the current font name.