Both of them mean space, but is there any difference?
13 Answers
One is non-breaking space and the other is a regular space. A non-breaking space means that the line should not be wrapped at that point, just like it wouldn’t be wrapped in the middle of a word.
Furthermore as Svend points out in his comment, non-breaking spaces are not collapsed.
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55 are also non-collapsing, that's probably the most significant aspect of their use (at least, that's how I tend to use them, pad stuff out, quick and easy)– SvendAug 31, 2009 at 12:10
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68Protip: Please do not use 15 %nbsp;'s in a row to space something. Drives me insane when I see people doing that. Use CSS padding or margin. Sep 29, 2009 at 19:17
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9
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@Amarghosh: Just the kind of guru I always wanted to be ... :) Nov 19, 2009 at 13:29
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2There are also other sizes of spacing entities, like
&hairsp      
which you can see and experiment with at [jsfiddle.net/medmunds/4crt3c9j/] Dec 6, 2016 at 16:50
The entity
produces a non-breaking space, which is used when you don't want an automatic line break at that position. The regular space has the character code 32, while the non-breaking space has the character code 160.
For example when you display numbers with space as thousands separator: 1 234 567, then you use non-breaking spaces so that the number can't be split on separate lines. If you display currency and there is a space between the amount and the currency: 42 SEK, then you use a non-breaking space so that you don't get the amount on one line and the currency on the next.
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10Good examples of nbsp use. I was looking for some myself, but couldn't think of them.– PeteAug 31, 2009 at 12:11
In addition to the other answers here, non-breaking spaces will not be "collapsed" like regular spaces will. For example:
<!-- Both -->
<p>Word1 Word2</p>
<!-- and -->
<p>Word1 Word2</p>
<!-- will render the same on any browser -->
<!-- While the below one will keep the spaces when rendered. -->
<p>Word1 Word2</p>
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No, then I ended up with & throughout. It didn't interpret the &'s but it did interpret the  's. Aug 31, 2009 at 12:57
Not an answer as much as examples...
Example #1:
<div style="width:45px; height:45px; border: solid thin red; overflow: visible">
Hello There
</div>
Example #2:
<div style="width:45px; height:45px; border: solid thin red; overflow: visible">
Hello There
</div>
And link to the fiddle.
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4No need to glance at another answers IMHO. 9 years, still valid. Jun 1, 2018 at 18:37
Multiple normal white space characters (space, tabulator and line break) are treated as one single white space character:
For all HTML elements except
PRE
, sequences of white space separate "words" (we use the term "word" here to mean "sequences of non-white space characters"). When formatting text, user agents should identify these words and lay them out according to the conventions of the particular written language (script) and target medium.
So
foo bar
is displayed as
foo bar
But no-break space is always displayed. So
foo   bar
is displayed as
foo bar
You can see a working example here:
http://codepen.io/anon/pen/GJzBxo
and
http://codepen.io/anon/pen/LVqBQo
Same div, same text, different "spaces"
<div style="width: 500px; background: red"> [loooong text with spaces]</div>
vs
<div style="width: 500px; background: red"> [loooong text with ]</div>
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1
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I have upvoted it. I think it doesn't explain things. However you are pointing out something visual which is useful.– NishantJan 12, 2016 at 14:23
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2SO questions and answers are supposed to be self-contained. An outside link to codepen is also allowed, if the full answer is also included in the post directly. To adhere to SO policy,
edit
your post to either include the resulting output of the code in your answer, or to add SO's own embedded version of codepen, so the visitor can run the code ans see the result without leaving to an external page. The reason for the self-contained policy is that if the link becomes unreachable, the answer becomes useless. Also, it's poor UX to require users to leave, just to get an answer. Jan 9, 2019 at 17:55
As already mentioned, you will not receive a line break where there is a "no-break space".
Also be wary, that elements containing only a " " may show up incorrectly, where will work. In i.e. 6 at least (as far as I remember, IE7 has the same issue), if you have an empty table element, it will not apply styling, for example borders, to the element, if there is no content, or only white space. So the following will not be rendered with borders:
<td></td>
<td> <td>
Whereas the borders will show up in this example:
<td>& nbsp;</td>
Hmm -had to put in a dummy space to get it to render correctly here
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@Stewart - I tried with amp, and it worked in the text, but not in code exmple - because it also wrote the "amp" part out– PeteAug 31, 2009 at 12:52
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The first is not treated as white space by the HTML parser, the second is. As a result the " " is not guaranteed to showup within certain HTML markup, while the non breakable space will always show up.
should be handled as a whitespace.
should be handled as two whitespaces
' ' can be handled as a non interesting whitespace
' ' + ' ' can be handled as a single ' '
is stackable, meaning you can create multiple spaces all together.
HTML will only parse one space '' and it drops the rest...
If you want five spaces, you would place 5 x
@Zoidberg is right, example:
<h1>title</h1> <h2>date</h2>
will not display space between header markup, with
& nbsp ;
will do space :)
When having line-breaks, the line will not break when you use an $bnsp; because it's a 'non-breaking space'. This can be important if you have certain product-names or such, that always shall be written together.
Can be interesting if you (have to) use a whitespace as delimiter in numbers, like 12344567, that is displayed 12 344 567 in France. Without the the line would break in the middle of the number, very ugly. Test:12 344 567
TLDR; In addition to the accepted answer; One is implicit and one is explicit.
When the HTML you've written or had generated by an application/library/framework is read by your browser it will do it's best to interpret what your HTML meant (which can vary from browser to browser). When you use the HTML entity codes, you are being more specific to the browser. You are explicitly telling it you wish to display a character to the user (and not that you are just spacing your HTML for easier readability for the developer for instance).
To be more concrete, if the output HTML were:
<html>
<title>hello</title>
<body>
<p>
Tell me and I will forget. Teach me and I
may remember. Involve me and I will learn.
</p>
</body>
</html>
The browser would only render one space between all of these words (even the ones that have been indented for better developer readability.
If, however, you put the same thing and only changed the <p>
tag to:
<p>Hello There</p>
Then it would render the spaces, as you've instructed it more explicitly. There is some history of using these spaces for styling. This use has somewhat been diminished as CSS has matured. However, there are still valid uses for many of the HTML character entities: avoiding unexpectedly/unintentionally interpretation (e.g. if you wanted to display code). The w3 has a great page to show the other character codes.
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Try:
<p>Hello There</p>
OR<p>Hello There</p>
(If breaking is not a problem you can save some bits by using Regular empty space before and after every
).– CyborgSep 10, 2019 at 1:12