Unicode 9.0 Characters: Miscellaneous Mathematical Symbols-A

Unicode 9.0 reference chart for the Miscellaneous Mathematical Symbols-A character block.

CharacterEntityHexadecimalDecimalName
⟀⟀THREE DIMENSIONAL ANGLE
⟁⟁WHITE TRIANGLE CONTAINING SMALL WHITE TRIANGLE
⟂⟂PERPENDICULAR
⟃⟃OPEN SUBSET
⟄⟄OPEN SUPERSET
⟅⟅LEFT S-SHAPED BAG DELIMITER
⟆⟆RIGHT S-SHAPED BAG DELIMITER
⟇⟇OR WITH DOT INSIDE
⟈⟈REVERSE SOLIDUS PRECEDING SUBSET
⟉⟉SUPERSET PRECEDING SOLIDUS
⟊⟊VERTICAL BAR WITH HORIZONTAL STROKE
⟋⟋MATHEMATICAL RISING DIAGONAL
⟌⟌LONG DIVISION
⟍⟍MATHEMATICAL FALLING DIAGONAL
⟎⟎SQUARED LOGICAL AND
⟏⟏SQUARED LOGICAL OR
⟐⟐WHITE DIAMOND WITH CENTRED DOT
⟑⟑AND WITH DOT
⟒⟒ELEMENT OF OPENING UPWARDS
⟓⟓LOWER RIGHT CORNER WITH DOT
⟔⟔UPPER LEFT CORNER WITH DOT
⟕⟕LEFT OUTER JOIN
⟖⟖RIGHT OUTER JOIN
⟗⟗FULL OUTER JOIN
⟘⟘LARGE UP TACK
⟙⟙LARGE DOWN TACK
⟚⟚LEFT AND RIGHT DOUBLE TURNSTILE
⟛⟛LEFT AND RIGHT TACK
⟜⟜LEFT MULTIMAP
⟝⟝LONG RIGHT TACK
⟞⟞LONG LEFT TACK
⟟⟟UP TACK WITH CIRCLE ABOVE
⟠⟠LOZENGE DIVIDED BY HORIZONTAL RULE
⟡⟡WHITE CONCAVE-SIDED DIAMOND
⟢⟢WHITE CONCAVE-SIDED DIAMOND WITH LEFTWARDS TICK
⟣⟣WHITE CONCAVE-SIDED DIAMOND WITH RIGHTWARDS TICK
⟤⟤WHITE SQUARE WITH LEFTWARDS TICK
⟥⟥WHITE SQUARE WITH RIGHTWARDS TICK
⟦ ⟦⟦⟦MATHEMATICAL LEFT WHITE SQUARE BRACKET
⟧ ⟧⟧⟧MATHEMATICAL RIGHT WHITE SQUARE BRACKET
⟨ ⟨ ⟨⟨⟨MATHEMATICAL LEFT ANGLE BRACKET
⟩ ⟩ ⟩⟩⟩MATHEMATICAL RIGHT ANGLE BRACKET
⟪⟪⟪MATHEMATICAL LEFT DOUBLE ANGLE BRACKET
⟫⟫⟫MATHEMATICAL RIGHT DOUBLE ANGLE BRACKET
⟬⟬⟬MATHEMATICAL LEFT WHITE TORTOISE SHELL BRACKET
⟭⟭⟭MATHEMATICAL RIGHT WHITE TORTOISE SHELL BRACKET
⟮⟮MATHEMATICAL LEFT FLATTENED PARENTHESIS
⟯⟯MATHEMATICAL RIGHT FLATTENED PARENTHESIS

How to Use the Character Codes

To display any of the characters in the left column within a web page, you'll need to use one of the codes in the other columns within your HTML code.

You can choose either the entity name from the Entity column, the hexadecimal value from the Hexadecimal column, or the decimal value from the Decimal column.

Where there's more than one entity name, choose just one.

Where there's more than one hexadecimal, use both. This is because the named entity uses more than one character to display the glyph. The same applies with the decimal value.

You'll need to include the leading ampersand (&) and trailing semi-colon (;), as well as any hash symbols (#) and x characters.

About Unicode 9.0

Unicode version 9.0 was announced in June, 2016. Unicode 9.0 adds 7,500 characters to the Unicode Standard, bringing the total to 128,172 characters. The additions include 6 new scripts and 72 new emoji characters.

Full details:

The Unicode Consortium. The Unicode Standard, Version 9.0.0, (Mountain View, CA: The Unicode Consortium, 2016. ISBN 978-1-936213-13-9)
http://www.unicode.org/versions/Unicode9.0.0/