Box-drawing characters

Box-drawing characters, also known as line-drawing characters, are a form of semigraphics widely used in text user interfaces to draw various geometric frames and boxes. These characters are characterized by being designed to be connected horizontally and/or vertically with adjacent characters, which requires proper alignment. Box-drawing characters therefore typically only work well with monospaced fonts.

In graphical user interfaces, these characters are much less useful as it is more simple and appropriate to draw lines and rectangles directly with graphical APIs. However, they are still useful for command-line interfaces and plaintext comments within source code.

Some recent embedded systems also use proprietary character sets, usually extensions to ISO 8859 character sets, which include box-drawing characters or other special symbols.

Other types of box-drawing characters are block elements, shade characters, and terminal graphic characters; these can be used for filling regions of the screen and portraying drop shadows.

Box Drawing
Unicode includes 128 such characters in the Box Drawing block. In many Unicode fonts, only the subset that is also available in the IBM PC character set (see below) will exist, due to it being defined as part of the WGL4 character set.

The image below is provided as a quick reference for these symbols on systems that are unable to display them directly:

Block Elements
The Block Elements Unicode block includes shading characters. 32 characters are included in the block.

Symbols for Legacy Computing
In version 13.0, Unicode was extended with another block containing many graphics characters, Symbols for Legacy Computing, which includes a few box-drawing characters and other symbols used by obsolete operating systems (mostly from the 1980s). Few fonts support these characters (one is Noto Sans Symbols 2), but the table of symbols is provided here:

The image below is provided as a quick reference for these symbols on systems that are unable to display them directly:

Platform-specific
Various different platforms defined their own unique set of box-drawing characters.

DOS
The hardware code page of the original IBM PC supplied the following box-drawing characters, in what DOS now calls code page 437. This subset of the Unicode box-drawing characters is thus included in WGL4 and is far more popular and likely to be rendered correctly:

The integral halves are also box drawing as they are used alongside 0xB3:

Their number is further limited to 28 on those code pages that replace the 18 characters that combine single and double lines, the left and right half blocks, as well as integral halves with other, usually alphabetic, characters (such as code page 850):

Note: The non-double characters are the thin (light) characters (U+2500, U+2502), not the bold (heavy) characters (U+2501, U+2503).

Some OEM DOS computers supported other character sets, for example the Hewlett-Packard HP 110 / HP Portable and HP 110 Plus / HP Portable Plus, where in a modified version of the character set box-drawing characters were added in reserved areas of their normal HP Roman-8 character set.

Unix, CP/M, BBS
On many Unix systems and early dial-up bulletin board systems the only common standard for box-drawing characters was the VT100 alternate character set (see also: DEC Special Graphics). The escape sequence  switched the codes for lower-case ASCII letters to draw this set, and the sequence   switched back:

On some terminals, these characters are not available at all, and the complexity of the escape sequences discouraged their use, so often only ASCII characters that approximate box-drawing characters are used, such as - (hyphen-minus), | (vertical bar), _(underscore), =(equal sign) and + (plus sign) in a kind of ASCII art fashion.

Modern Unix terminal emulators use Unicode and thus have access to the line-drawing characters listed above.

Teletext
The World System Teletext (WST) uses pixel-drawing characters for some graphics. A character cell is divided in 2×3 regions, and 26 = 64 code positions are allocated for all possible combinations of pixels. These characters were added to the Unicode standard in Version 13.

Historical
Many microcomputers of the 1970s and 1980s had their own proprietary character sets, which also included box-drawing characters. Many of these were added to Unicode as Symbols for Legacy Computing.

Commodore
Commodore machines, such as the Commodore PET and the Commodore 64, included a set of text semigraphics with block elements and dithering patterns in the PETSCII character set.

Sinclair


The Sinclair ZX80, ZX81, and ZX Spectrum included a set of text semigraphics with quadrant-based block elements. The ZX80 and ZX81 also included a set of text semigraphics with dithering patterns.

BBC and Acorn
The BBC Micro could utilize the Teletext 7-bit character set, which had 128 box-drawing characters, whose code points were shared with the regular alphanumeric and punctuation characters. Control characters were used to switch between regular text and box drawing.

The BBC Master and later Acorn computers have the soft font by default defined with line drawing characters.

Amstrad
The Amstrad CPC character set also has soft characters defined by default as block and line drawing characters.

The CP/M Plus character set used on various Amstrad computers of the CPC, PCW and Spectrum families included a rich set of line-drawing characters as well:

Apple
MouseText is a set of display characters for the Apple IIc, IIe, and IIGS that includes box-drawing characters.

Encoding
On many platforms, the character shape is determined programmatically from the character code.


 * ZX Spectrum block characters:
 * 0x80 + topright*1 + topleft*2 + bottomright*4 + bottomleft*8
 * Amstrad CPC block characters:
 * 0x80 + topleft*1 + topright*2 + bottomleft*4 + bottomright*8
 * Amstrad CPC line characters:
 * 0x90 + up*1 + right*2 + down*4 + left*8
 * BBC Master line characters:
 * 0xA0 + down*1 + right*2 + left*4 + up*8
 * Teletext block characters:
 * 0xA0 + topleft*1 + topright*2 + middleleft*4 + middleright*8 + bottomleft*16 + bottomright*64

However, DOS line- and box-drawing characters are not ordered in any programmatic manner, so calculating a particular character shape needs to use a look-up table.

Examples
Sample diagrams made out of the standard box-drawing characters, using a monospaced font:  ┌─┬┐ ╔═╦╗  ╓─╥╖  ╒═╤╕ │ ││  ║ ║║  ║ ║║  │ ││ ├─┼┤  ╠═╬╣  ╟─╫╢  ╞═╪╡ └─┴┘  ╚═╩╝  ╙─╨╜  ╘═╧╛ ┌───────────────────┐ │  ╔═══╗ Some Text  │▒ │ ╚═╦═╝ in the box │▒ ╞═╤══╩══╤═══════════╡▒ │ ├──┬──┤          │▒ │ └──┴──┘           │▒ └───────────────────┘▒ ▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒