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  1. HTML Character Entities. Some characters are reserved in HTML. If you use the less than (<) or greater than (>) signs in your HTML text, the browser might mix them with tags. Entity names or entity numbers can be used to display reserved HTML characters. Entity names look like this: & entity_name; Entity numbers look like this: &# entity_number;

  2. www.html.am › html-codes › character-codesHTML Ampersand Code

    An ampersand (sometimes referred to as the "and" symbol) is a special character that requires special coding when being used on a website or blog. To display the ampersand symbol, you can use either the HTML entity number or the entity name.

  3. HTML symbol, character and entity codes, ASCII, CSS and HEX values for Ampersand, plus a panoply of others.

  4. Browse special HTML symbols and find their character codes in the categories above. Every character has a code available in the following format Ӓ. Some of them has a more human-friendly entity code available which is not so widely supported in older browsers. An entity format example: & (amersand).

  5. 25 maj 2020 · Most ASCII characters have a special code you can use in HTML to make that character reliably appear. These HTML Entities are particularly helpful for, say, manually inserting whitespace into your HTML. Each of these codes starts with an ampersand and ends with a semicolon.

  6. 26 sty 2010 · Both are character references and refer to the same character (AMPERSAND, U+0026). &amp; is a named or entity character reference and &#38; is a numerical character reference. In fact, &amp; is actually just a substitution for &#38; (see list of character entities): <!ENTITY amp CDATA "&#38;" -- ampersand, U+0026 ISOnum -->

  7. Easily find HTML punctuation symbols, entities, characters and codes with ASCII, HEX, CSS and Unicode values; including ampersand, percent and number signs.

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