Free Hindi Font Converter

Chanakya to Unicode Converter

Convert Walkman Chanakya font to Unicode instantly. Paste your Chanakya encoded content and get clean Unicode output that works on every website, app and device.

Input Output
Chanakya → Unicode (Mangal)
Chanakya Input
0 characters
Unicode (Mangal) Output
0 characters
The Unicode output works everywhere without any font installed. Paste it directly into Gmail, WhatsApp, Google Docs, government portals or any website and it displays correctly as Hindi text.
Instant
Converts as you type
Accurate
Full Chanakya character map
Private
Text never leaves your browser
The Process

How to Convert Chanakya to Unicode?

Paste your Chanakya text

Open your document in Word or PageMaker, copy the Hindi text and paste it here. Even though it looks like random letters, the converter reads it correctly as Chanakya encoding.

The engine maps each character

Chanakya stores Hindi as ASCII codes. The converter reads each code, including multi-character sequences for consonants like ख ([k), घ (?k) and conjuncts like त्र (=) and ज्ञ (K), then replaces them with the correct Unicode Devanagari characters.

ि matra and reph are reordered

Chanakya places the ि matra before its consonant (ç before the consonant) and reph (ü after the syllable). The converter detects both and reorders them into correct Unicode sequence, which is where most basic font converter tools fail.

Copy, download or share

The Unicode output works everywhere without any font. Copy to WhatsApp, paste into a government form, email it or download as a .DOC file ready for Word or Google Docs.

Chanakya Input (looks like this)
ÖæÚUÌ çßçßÏ
⚡ Converting
Unicode (Mangal) Output
भारत विविध
Sample character map
Ö
·¤
Á
स्त
æ
ç[con]ि after
ü [reph]र्
Common Questions

Questions about Chanakya to Unicode conversion

Chanakya stores Hindi characters as ASCII codes. When you open a Chanakya document without that font installed, you see the underlying ASCII characters instead of Hindi. For example, ज is stored as "T" in Chanakya encoding. This converter reads those codes and replaces them with proper Unicode Devanagari characters that any device displays correctly without any font.

Chanakya is a legacy font encoding where each Hindi character is mapped to an ASCII code. Without the Chanakya font installed, text looks like random English letters. Unicode is a global standard where every Hindi character has a unique code point that every operating system understands natively, so no special font is ever needed. Converting to Unicode makes your Hindi content universally accessible.

Both are legacy Hindi fonts that encode Devanagari as ASCII, but they use different character maps. The most notable difference is ज: Krutidev maps it to "t" while Chanakya maps it to "T". They also differ on several conjuncts and special characters. Text encoded for one font looks wrong when displayed in the other, which is why using the correct converter matters.

Yes. Copy your entire document from Word or PageMaker, paste it into the input box and click Convert. There is no character limit. Everything processes instantly in your browser with no server delay. Download the result as a .DOC file to get it straight back into Word format.

Yes. Government websites and online forms require Unicode Hindi. The output from this converter pastes directly into any government portal, NIC system or e-court platform and displays correctly without any font installation on the other end.

Walkman Chanakya 901, 902 and 905 all use the same keyboard and character encoding. The variants differ only in glyph styling, not the underlying ASCII map. Select whichever matches the font name shown in your document. The conversion result will be identical for all three.

Completely. The conversion runs entirely in JavaScript inside your browser. Nothing you type is transmitted to any server or stored in any way. Safe for editorial drafts, legal documents and confidential content.