# Digraph Unicode Characters Have a Titlecase Coming from primarily being exposed to the US American alphabet, I'm familiar with characters that I type into the computer having one of two cases. Either it is lowercase by default (`c`) or I can hit the shift key to produce the uppercase version (`C`). Unicode, which has broad support for character encoding across most languages, has a couple characters that are called _digraphs_. These are single code points, but look like they are made up of two characters. A good example of this is `dž`. And if that character were to appear in an all uppercase word, then it would display as `DŽ`. But what if it appears at the beginning of a capitalized word? That's where _titlecase_ comes into the picture -- `Dž`. From [wikipedia](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/D%C5%BE): > Note that when the letter is the initial of a capitalised word (like Džungla > or Džemper, or personal names like Džemal or Džamonja), the ž is not > uppercase. Only when the whole word is written in uppercase, is the Ž > capitalised. (I find it odd that wikipedia's article on this digraph code point is using separate characters instead of the digraph.) [source](https://devblogs.microsoft.com/oldnewthing/20241031-00/?p=110443)