What\'s the HTML character entity for the # sign? I\'ve looked around for \"pound\" (keeps returning the currency), and \"hash\" and \"number\", but what I try doesn\'t seem to
You can search it on the individual character at fileformat.info. Enter #
as search string and the 1st hit will lead you to U+0023. Scroll a bit down to the 2nd table, Encodings, you'll see under each the following entries:
HTML Entity (decimal) # HTML Entity (hex) #
# or #
http://www.asciitable.com/ has information. Wikipedia also has pages for most unicode characters.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Number_sign
There is no HTML character entity for the #
character, as the character has no special meaning in HTML.
You have to use a character code entity like #
if you wish to HTML encode it for some reason.
For #
we have #
.
Bear in mind, though, it is a new entity (IE9 can't recognize it, for instance). For wide support, you'll have to resort, as said by others, the numerical references #
and, in hex, #
.
If you need to find out others, there are some very useful tools around.
The "#" -- like most Unicode characters -- has no particular name assigned to it in the W3 list of "Character entity references" http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/sgml/entities.html . So in HTML it is either represented by itself as "#" or a numeric character entity "#" or "#" (without quotes), as described in "HTML Document Representation" http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/charset.html .
Alas, all three of these are useless for escaping it in a URL. To transmit a "#" character to the web server in a URL, you want to use "URL encoding" aka "percent encoding" as described in RFC 3986, and replace each "#" with a "%23" (without quotes).
The numerical reference is #
.