For those who first learn Japanese they learn hiragana and how to spell all words that way. Once you can learn kanji it takes place of the necessary hiragana.
If you're new to it you may use/write ããã but once you recognize ç§ and especially if you can write the character then you may use that instead.
Note: ç§ is *pronounced* the way you would sound out ããã (wa-ta-shi).
Answers & Comments
Verified answer
hiragana or kanji,
no difference
You can use both of them, but ããã looks like childish or poetic.
So I think you should write it in kanji. Actually I also write in kanji.
(Plus.... If you are a man, don't call yourself "ç§" in conversation...lol )
For those who first learn Japanese they learn hiragana and how to spell all words that way. Once you can learn kanji it takes place of the necessary hiragana.
If you're new to it you may use/write ããã but once you recognize ç§ and especially if you can write the character then you may use that instead.
Note: ç§ is *pronounced* the way you would sound out ããã (wa-ta-shi).