# fromCodePoint > Create a string from a sequence of Unicode [code points][code-point].
## Usage ```javascript var fromCodePoint = require( '@stdlib/string/from-code-point' ); ``` #### fromCodePoint( pt1\[, pt2\[, pt3\[, ...]]] ) Creates a `string` from a sequence of Unicode [code points][code-point]. ```javascript var out = fromCodePoint( 9731 ); // returns '☃' ``` In addition to providing [code points][code-point] as separate arguments, the function supports providing an array-like `object` as a single argument containing a sequence of [code points][code-point]. ```javascript var Uint16Array = require( '@stdlib/array/uint16' ); var out = fromCodePoint( 97, 98, 99 ); // returns 'abc' out = fromCodePoint( new Uint16Array( [ 97, 98, 99 ] ) ); // returns 'abc' ```
## Notes - This function differs from [`String.fromCharCode`][mdn-string-fromcharcode] in the following ways: - The function provides support for all valid Unicode values (up to `21` bits). While most common Unicode values can be represented using one 16-bit unit, higher code point characters require two 16-bit units (a surrogate pair consisting of a high and a low surrogate) to form a single character. [`String.fromCharCode`][mdn-string-fromcharcode] does **not** support surrogate pairs, supporting only UCS-2, a subset of [UTF-16][utf-16]. - This function differs from [`String.fromCodePoint`][mdn-string-fromcodepoint] in the following ways: - The function supports explicitly providing an array-like `object` containing a sequence of [code points][code-point]. - The function requires **at least** one [code point][code-point]. - The function requires that all [code points][code-point] be nonnegative integers. The function does **not** support values, such as `null`, `undefined`, `true`, `false`, `'0'`, `'1'`, etc., which can be cast to integer values.
## Examples ```javascript var randu = require( '@stdlib/random/base/randu' ); var floor = require( '@stdlib/math/base/special/floor' ); var UNICODE_MAX_BMP = require( '@stdlib/constants/unicode/max-bmp' ); var fromCodePoint = require( '@stdlib/string/from-code-point' ); var x; var i; for ( i = 0; i < 100; i++ ) { x = floor( randu()*UNICODE_MAX_BMP ); console.log( '%d => %s', x, fromCodePoint( x ) ); } ```
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## CLI
### Usage ```text Usage: from-code-point [options] [ ...] Options: -h, --help Print this message. -V, --version Print the package version. --split sep Delimiter for stdin data. Default: '/\\r?\\n/'. ```
### Notes - If the split separator is a [regular expression][mdn-regexp], ensure that the `split` option is either properly escaped or enclosed in quotes. ```bash # Not escaped... $ echo -n $'97\n98\n99' | from-code-point --split /\r?\n/ # Escaped... $ echo -n $'97\n98\n99' | from-code-point --split /\\r?\\n/ ``` - The implementation ignores trailing delimiters.
### Examples ```bash $ from-code-point 9731 ☃ ``` To use as a [standard stream][standard-streams], ```bash $ echo -n '9731' | from-code-point ☃ ``` By default, when used as a [standard stream][standard-streams], the implementation assumes newline-delimited data. To specify an alternative delimiter, set the `split` option. ```bash $ echo -n '97\t98\t99\t' | from-code-point --split '\t' abc ```