HTML Entities
Some characters are reserved in HTML.It is not possible to use the less than (<) or greater than (>) signs in your text, because the browser will mix them with tags.
To actually display reserved characters, we must use character entities in the HTML source code.
A character entity looks like this:
&entity_name; OR &#entity_number; |
Tip: The advantage of using an entity name, instead of a number, is that the name is easier to remember. However, the disadvantage is that browsers may not support all entity names (the support for entity numbers is very good).
Non-breaking Space
A common character entity used in HTML is the non-breaking space ( ).Browsers will always truncate spaces in HTML pages. If you write 10 spaces in your text, the browser will remove 9 of them, before displaying the page. To add spaces to your text, you can use the character entity.
HTML Entities Example
Experiment with HTML character entities: Try it yourselfHTML Useful Character Entities
Note: Entity names are case sensitive!Result | Description | Entity Name | Entity Number |
---|---|---|---|
non-breaking space | |   | |
< | less than | < | < |
> | greater than | > | > |
& | ampersand | & | & |
¢ | cent | ¢ | ¢ |
£ | pound | £ | £ |
¥ | yen | ¥ | ¥ |
€ | euro | € | € |
§ | section | § | § |
© | copyright | © | © |
® | registered trademark | ® | ® |
™ | trademark | ™ | ™ |
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