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Sarah814

: Do formatting (invisible) characters have a name? In typography, some text editors will offer the option to display "invisible" or "formatting" characters such as these: (from this page) Do these

@Sarah814

Posted in: #Symbols #Text #Typesetting #Typography

In typography, some text editors will offer the option to display "invisible" or "formatting" characters such as these:



(from this page)

Do these have a name?

I mean, of course you could call them "bullet" (the first one) or "tab" symbol (the second one), etc, but I am thinking that they might have a special name for this very particular typographical use.

The only one I could find while searching through Apple's Character Viewer is "Pilcrow" (the "paragraph break" sign), but its Wikipedia page and an online search didn't help me in fining the names of the other ones when used as formatting symbols (I'm especially intrigued by the symbol used to represent the Nonbreaking space, which looks like a bullet with a circumflex accent).

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@Samaraweera207

From your question, the general category of characters or symbols that you are referring to are called Whitespace Characters.

Whitespace characters are the representation of any character that causes a horizontal or vertical spacing change in typography.

The symbols themselves are called markup symbols and stem from proofreading editor markup symbol sets. See the graphic below for one of many examples on the web of proofreading markup.

In the case of the characters you are asking about specifically. These are a symbolic set that Apple chose to represent the whitespace markup for their system. Different OSs have chosen to represent some of these characters differently. This is typical of systems that don't understand where these symbols came from in the first place.

The second one in specific is the Nonbreaking space, and was chosen because the classic proofreading markup for a space was a #. Since the # character is a real character and used in computer designations, a newer character had to be created. On some OSs this is represented as a larger dot with a smaller dot above it, rather than the caret or circumfex symbol.

In terms of old school typography the character is the Em Space. The em space is a nonbreaking space equal to the width of a typeface's point size. It was derived from old typesetting where a blank metal block who's width is that of a capital M was placed in a row of text. This is also where the HTML/CSS designation for an "em" character sizing comes from.

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@Yeniel278

The symbol you used for space (·) is 'MIDDLE DOT'(U+00B7) also known as interpunkt or

One could alternatively use the symbol (␣) 2423 open box (space symbol)
could not find a dot with circumfex but there are combining symbols in unicode so you could use 'COMBINING CIRCUMFLEX ACCENT' (U+0302) which would result in (·̂) but support in browsers is weak.
The tab symbol (⇥) 'RIGHTWARDS ARROW TO BAR' (U+21E5) or

in this case it seems to be (→) 'RIGHTWARDS ARROW'(U+2192).

It could also be (⭾) 'HORIZONTAL TAB KEY'(U+2B7E)
Line break symbol can (should) be (⏎) which can vary by font, 'RETURN SYMBOL'(U+23CE) or

it could also be (↵) 'DOWNWARDS ARROW WITH CORNER LEFTWARDS'(U+21B5) or it could be also be U+8617.
Pillcrow or end of paragraph (¶) 'PILCROW SIGN' (U+00B6)

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