
The Character Map is, quite literally, a map of just about any special character you could ever possibly want to use, from basic Latin characters, to common symbols such as the dollar sign or ampersand, all the way to rare mathematical and scientific symbols.

It turns out that the Character Map – or charmap.exe – seems to exist in a sort-of Windows build limbo, and has been stuck there since the days Microsoft scrapped Longhorn, and started over.Įven though most of you will know what the Character Map is, I’ll give a short introduction anyway. I’ll first explain just how bad it really is, after which I’ll dive into the little application’s history, to try and find out why, exactly, it is as bad as it is. This is the story of the dreaded Character Map. Using this utility is an exercise in pure frustration, riddled as it is with terrible user interface design and behaviour that never should have shipped as part of any serious software product. There’s one utility that I need to use quite often that, seemingly, hasn’t been updated – at least, not considerably – since at least Windows 95, or possibly even Windows 3.x.

Most of these are hidden in deep nooks and crannies, and you rarely encounter them, unless you start hunting for them. It’s been around for a very long time, and while it’s been continuously updated and altered, and parts are removed or replaced all the time, the operating system still houses quite a few tools, utilities, and assets that haven’t been updated or replaced in a long, long time.

Windows is an old and complex operating system.
