


Here's how: Go to the Start menu, type in 'notepad', and select the Best match. You may need to adjust this to get fonts in apps like Facebook to work as you want them to. You can easily change the default font on your Windows 10 or Windows 11 machine. some special characters will not display as wanted), these applications then by design will default to the Administrative System Locale Language and treat whatever is set there as the Unicode language. I failed to say, 'change default font in windows mail.' It should be easy but isn't. What this means, is that when a User such as yourself is making use of such an application - such as Facebook which you raised - but your language is not fully covered by the Unicode convention (i.e. Go to the control panel and select font settings and choose the font you needed. Just about all applications today make use of the Unicode Consortium's standard. I've never had to face the situation you are in, when the the standard set by the Unicode Consortium which is world-wide accepted, unfortunately does not quite cover the special characters in some languages - including apparently your native language.
