ऑनलाइन सबसे सटीक और तेज़ हिंदी फॉन्ट परिवर्तक। यूनिकोड (मंगल) टेक्स्ट को कृतिदेव 010 में पूर्ण सटीकता और द्विदिश रूपांतरण के साथ बदलें।
नीचे अपना यूनिकोड (मंगल) टेक्स्ट पेस्ट करें और तुरंत कृतिदेव आउटपुट प्राप्त करें
यूनिकोड (मंगल फॉन्ट) में लिखा गया हिंदी टेक्स्ट आज हर वेबसाइट और मोबाइल पर काम करता है। लेकिन सरकारी दफ्तरों, टाइपिंग परीक्षाओं (CPCT, RSCIT) और पुराने दस्तावेजों में कृतिदेव 010 फॉन्ट का इस्तेमाल होता है।
यह कन्वर्टर आपके यूनिकोड टेक्स्ट को कृतिदेव फॉर्मेट में बदल देता है — मात्राओं, संयुक्त अक्षरों और हलंत को सही तरीके से संभालते हुए।
The converter reads each Unicode (Mangal) character and looks it up in a mapping table that pairs every Devanagari letter, matra, and conjunct with its KrutiDev equivalent.
Special rules handle tricky cases: the "choti-i" matra gets reordered to appear before the consonant, half-letters combine correctly through halant processing, and conjunct clusters like क्ष, त्र, and ज्ञ map to single KrutiDev glyphs.
The whole process runs in your browser using JavaScript — nothing goes to a server. Click any character below to see its conversion path:
You don't need to install any software. This converter runs right in your browser — open the page, paste your text, and get KrutiDev output in under a second.
Online conversion beats desktop software in three ways: it works on any device (phone, tablet, laptop), it stays updated without manual patches, and it needs zero disk space.
This tool is completely free. No hidden charges, no premium tier, no word-count limits. Convert as much text as you need, as many times as you want.
We built this because Hindi typists, government clerks, and students preparing for typing exams shouldn't have to pay for a basic font conversion. The converter runs on client-side JavaScript, so our server costs stay near zero — and we pass that on to you.
Pick the right converter for your workflow — Hindi, Marathi, PDF, Excel, PHP, or general-purpose.
General-purpose Unicode to Krutidev conversion for all Hindi text.
Targets Krutidev 010 — the standard font for government and print.
Convert Mangal font text to Krutidev — Mangal is Unicode under the hood.
Full Hindi Devanagari coverage — vowels, consonants, matras, and conjuncts.
Handles Marathi-specific characters like ळ and ऱ accurately.
Convert text for Krutidev-based PDF layouts and print publishing.
Produce Krutidev-encoded text for Excel cells and spreadsheet templates.
Full conversion software in your browser — no download or install needed.
Mobile-friendly web app — works on Android, iOS, and desktop browsers.
For PHP developers — test conversions and use the same logic in your code.
Same conversion as IndiaTyping — faster, cleaner, and ad-free.
Same as TypingBaba — ideal for CPCT and RSCIT exam preparation.
Unicode is a global text encoding standard maintained by the Unicode Consortium. It assigns a unique number (called a "code point") to every character in every writing system — Hindi, English, Chinese, Arabic, and 150+ other scripts.
Before Unicode, different regions used different encoding schemes. A Hindi document created with one font might show garbage characters on another computer. Unicode fixed this by creating one universal standard: UTF-8.
For example, the Devanagari letter "अ" has the Unicode code point U+0905. Every device, browser, and operating system that supports Unicode can display this character correctly.
Click a character to see its code point
A Unicode font is any font file that maps its glyphs (visual shapes) to Unicode code points. When you install a Unicode font like Mangal, Arial Unicode MS, or Noto Sans Devanagari, your computer can display Hindi text from any source — web pages, emails, PDFs — without compatibility issues.
Legacy fonts like KrutiDev, DevLys, and Shree Lipi use their own private character mappings. A "क" in KrutiDev is stored as the ASCII letter "d" — so if you open a KrutiDev document without the KrutiDev font installed, you see random English letters instead of Hindi.
That's why Unicode fonts matter: they store Hindi text as actual Hindi characters (U+0915 for क), not as hijacked English letters.
The converter above works as a full online editor. You can type or paste Unicode text on the left, and see KrutiDev output update on the right in real time.
Use the toolbar buttons to copy converted text to your clipboard, download it as a .txt file (ready for MS Word), clear both panels, or swap conversion direction (KrutiDev → Unicode).
The editor supports large documents — paste entire pages of Hindi text and get instant results. No lag, no word limits, no timeout.
Hindi Unicode fonts are font files designed to display Devanagari script using the Unicode standard. The most common Hindi Unicode font is Mangal — it comes pre-installed on every Windows computer since Windows XP.
Other Hindi Unicode fonts include Noto Sans Devanagari (by Google), Lohit Devanagari (used on Linux), and Arial Unicode MS. All of these fonts follow the same Unicode code points, so Hindi text typed in one font displays correctly in another.
The Devanagari Unicode block covers code points U+0900 to U+097F. This includes 13 vowels (स्वर), 33 consonants (व्यंजन), numerals (०-९), and special marks like anusvara (ं), visarga (ः), and chandrabindu (ँ).
If you share a KrutiDev document with someone who doesn't have the KrutiDev font installed, they see broken text — random English letters instead of Hindi. Unicode eliminates this problem. Text typed in any Unicode font (Mangal, Noto Sans, Lohit) displays correctly everywhere: Windows, Mac, Linux, Android, iOS.
Search engines like Google can only read Unicode Hindi text. If your website uses KrutiDev, Google sees ASCII gibberish — your Hindi content becomes invisible to search results. Unicode makes Hindi text searchable, copy-pasteable, and machine-readable.
The Digital India Initiative and government e-governance portals all use Unicode. CPCT and RSCIT typing exams require candidates to work with both Unicode and KrutiDev layouts. Knowing how to convert between them is a practical skill.
KrutiDev 010 released — becomes standard in Hindi typing
Unicode 4.0 adds full Devanagari support
Windows XP includes Mangal font by default
Google starts indexing Unicode Hindi content
Digital India Initiative mandates Unicode for e-governance
Unicode is the global standard — KrutiDev lives on in legacy systems