Css Styling

Size
›
15px
›
18px
›
21px
›
24px
›
27px
›
30px
›
33px
›
36px
›
42px
›
48px
›
54px
›
60px
›
66px
›
72px
💡: Some unicode characters will scale differently than others for different font sizes.
Text style
›
Bold
›
Italic
›
Underline
›
Strikethrough
›
UpperCase
›
LowerCase
›
Oblique
A ›
Subscript
A ›
Superscript
›
Shadow
💡: Some CSS style classes won’t work with some Unicode characters.
Font Family
›
Arial
›
Times New Roman
›
Verdana
›
Courier New
›
Garamond
›
Georgia
›
Trebuchet MS
›
Tahoma
›
Brush Script MT
💡: Unicode characters will be rendered differently (styles, embellishments, offset, color, shapes, etc.) in different fonts.
Fore color
›
White
›
Brown
›
Maroon
›
Magenta
›
Red
›
Orange
›
Yellow
›
Green
›
Teal
›
Cyan
›
Blue
›
Violet
›
Purple
›
Indigo
›
Gray
›
Black
💡: Some Unicode characters will look the same and not take fore color.
Back color
›
White
›
Brown
›
Maroon
›
Magenta
›
Red
›
Orange
›
Yellow
›
Green
›
Teal
›
Cyan
›
Blue
›
Violet
›
Purple
›
Indigo
›
Gray
›
Black
💡: Some Unicode characters might not look as anticipated under different background colors.

Latin 1 Supplement

Code Snippets

Lang Example Copy
HTML <p>&#155;</p>
📋
CSS .selector { content: '\009B' };
📋
JS var unicodeA = '\u009B ';
📋
CPP char unicodeA = ' \u009B ';
📋
Java char unicodeA = '\u009B';
📋
Python unicodeA = '\u009B'
📋

What is Unicode character ›?

The Unicode character › U+009B is Control Sequence Introducer in the Latin 1 Supplement block.

What does the Unicode character › represent?

The Unicode character › represents Control Sequence Introducer.

What is the Unicode code point for ›?

The Unicode code point for › is U+009B.

Is the appearance of the › character consistent across all platforms?

The appearance of the › character can vary slightly across different platforms and devices due to differences in font and rendering. However, the general design of the Control Sequence Introducer remains consistent.

How can I ensure the › character displays correctly on different devices?

Though using Unicode ensures consistent display across devices and platforms. Ensure that the font being used supports the Common script to correctly render the › character.

In which version was Unicode character › released, and to which block of characters does it belong?

Unicode character › was first introduced in Unicode Version 1.1, and it belongs to the Latin 1 Supplement block of characters.

Unicode Properties

Applicable Properties With Values

Age 1.1
Bidi Class Boundary Neutral
Bidi Paired Bracket Type Not a bracket
Block Latin 1 Supplement
General Category Control Character
Grapheme Cluster Break Control Neutral
Hangul Syllable Type Not Applicable
Indic Positional Category Not Applicable
Joining Type Unjoined
Line Break Combining Mark
Numeric Value Not a Number
Script Common
Sentence Break Unknown
Word Break Unknown
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