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This browser-based utility converts Unicode data to URL-encoding. Anything that you paste or enter in the text area on the left automatically gets URL-escaped on the right. It supports the most popular Unicode encodings (such as UTF-8, UTF-16, UCS-2, UTF-32, and UCS-4) and it works with emoji characters.
- Convert Unicode to Code Points
This utility converts your Unicode input data to code point...
- Remove Combining Characters
In this example, we clean a Unicode saying from all...
- Convert Unicode to a String Literal
To print binary code positions, use %B notation, octal code...
- Convert Unicode to a Data URL
A data URL (data URI) is a scheme defined by RFC 2397...
- Remove Zalgo From Unicode
To do this, enter the code positions of the marks separated...
- Chunkify Unicode
Chunkify Unicode - URL-encode Unicode – Online Unicode Tools...
- Split Unicode Into Fragments
This utility splits Unicode text into fragments. It's free,...
- Center Unicode
Center Unicode - URL-encode Unicode – Online Unicode Tools -...
- Convert Unicode to Code Points
This free online tool let's you encode or decode URLs and query strings.
Here you'll find example MySpace HTML codes that you can copy/paste and modify. All MySpace HTML codes have been tested on a real MySpace profile page. In addition to the MySpace HTML codes, you'll also find MySpace HTML generators that do most of the work for you and give you custom code.
Convert, encode and hash strings to almost anything you can think of. Encode or decode strings to and from base64. Url-encode or decode strings; Calculate almost any hash for the given string; Convert a hashed string into its unhashed counterpart (beta)
Font codes for your MySpace page. Check out the MySpace font code generator too!
Free MySpace text generator. Change the way your text looks on your MySpace profile page!
The best general known practice for those is: Convert to lower-case. Convert entire sequences of characters other than a-z and 0-9 to one hyphen (-) (not underscores) Remove 'stop words' from the URL, i.e. not-meaningfully-indexable words like 'a', 'an', and 'the'; Google 'stop words' for extensive lists.