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More posts by @Goswami781

5 Comments

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@Si4351233

Use © or ©.

Here's a complete reference of HTML symbol/sign: www.ascii.cl/htmlcodes.htm.

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@Megan663

There are several ways to get a copyright symbol into your web page:


Copy and paste it in: © (assuming your editor and web server agree on the character set (like UTF-8))
Use the HTML named entity ©
Use the numeric entity  
Type it using <Alt>0169 (also assumes your editor and web server can support extended characters properly)

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@Welton855

You type the character ©. The way you do that depends on your authoring environment. Using Windows, for example, you can use Alt+0169 if you cannot find a more convenient way.

You need to make sure that the character encoding of the page is properly declared, but you should do that anyway.

Even if you are using a legacy encoding like windows-1252 or iso-8859-1 and not the modern UTF-8, the copyright sign © can be entered as such.

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@Lengel546

Use &#169; or &copy; The last one is more easier to remember. Disadvantage is that some exotic browser can't read it, so then you have to use the number.

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@Sue5673885

Use &copy; in your HTML and you get ©.

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