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HTML Entities

Some characters are reserved in HTML.

 

If you use the less than (<) or greater than (>) signs in your text, the browser might mix them with tags.

 

Character entities are used to display reserved characters in HTML.

 

A character entity looks like this:

 

&entity_name;

OR

&#entity_number;

To display a less than sign (<) we must write: &lt; or &#60;

Non-breaking Space

A commonly used entity in HTML is the non-breaking space: &nbsp;

 

A non-breaking space is a space that will not break into a new line.

 

Two words separated by a non-breaking space will stick together (not break into a new line). This is handy when breaking the words might be disruptive.

EXAMPLE:

 

§ 10

10 km/h

10 PM

Another common use of the non-breaking space is to prevent browsers from truncating spaces in HTML pages.

 

If you write 10 spaces in your text, the browser will remove 9 of them. To add real spaces to your text, you can use the &nbsp; character entity.

Some Useful HTML Character Entities

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Combining Diacritical Marks

A diacritical mark is a "glyph" added to a letter.

 

Some diacritical marks, like grave (  ̀) and acute (  ́) are called accents.

 

Diacritical marks can appear both above and below a letter, inside a letter, and between two letters.

 

Diacritical marks can be used in combination with alphanumeric characters to produce a character that is not present in the character set (encoding) used in the page.

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