I'm trying to find the Unicode symbol to make a button display the Unicode pause symbol. I was able to find that the Unicode play symbol is ►
but I'm looking for the equivalent of the Unicode pause symbol.
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2Had this same question, but for a "Stop" button (square). Roko's answer was the best for this.– starmandeluxeOct 24, 2015 at 13:46
12 Answers
Unicode Standard for Media Control Symbols
Pause: ⏸︎
The Unicode Standard 13.0 (update 2020) provides the Miscellaneous Technical glyphs in the HEX range 2300–23FF
Miscellaneous Technical
Given the extensive Unicode 13.0 documentation, some of the glyphs we can associate to common Media control symbols would be as following:
Keyboard and UI symbols
23CF ⏏︎ Eject media
User interface symbols
23E9 ⏩︎ fast forward
23EA ⏪︎ rewind, fast backwards
23EB ⏫︎ fast increase
23EC ⏬︎ fast decrease
23ED ⏭︎ skip to end, next
23EE ⏮︎ skip to start, previous
23EF ⏯︎ play/pause toggle
23F1 ⏱︎ stopwatch
23F2 ⏲︎ timer clock
23F3 ⏳︎ hourglass
23F4 ⏴︎ reverse, back
23F5 ⏵︎ forward, next, play
23F6 ⏶︎ increase
23F7 ⏷︎ decrease
23F8 ⏸︎ pause
23F9 ⏹︎ stop
23FA ⏺︎ recordPower symbols from ISO 7000:2012
23FB ⏻︎ standby/power
23FC ⏼︎ power on/off
23FD ⏽︎ power on
2B58 ⭘︎ power offPower symbol from IEEE 1621-2004
23FE ⏾︎ power sleep
Use on the Web:
A file must be saved using UTF-8 encoding without BOM (which in most development environments is set by default) in order to instruct the parser how to transform the bytes into characters correctly. <meta charset="utf-8"/>
should be used immediately after <head>
in a HTML file, and make sure the correct HTTP headers Content-Type: text/html; charset=utf-8
are set.
Examples:
HTML⏩ Pictograph
⏩︎ Standardized Variant
CSS
.icon-ff:before { content: "\23E9" }
.icon-ff--standard:before { content: "\23E9\FE0E" }
JavaScript
EL_iconFF.textContent = "\u23E9";
EL_iconFF_standard.textContent = "\u23E9\uFE0E"
Standardized variant
To prevent a glyph from being "color-emojified" ⏩︎ / ⏩ append the code U+FE0E Text Presentation Selector to request a Standardized variant: (example: ⏩︎
)
Inconsistencies
Characters in the Unicode range are susceptible to the font-family environment they are used, application, browser, OS, platform.
When unknown or missing - we might see symbols like � or ▯ instead, or even inconsistent behavior due to differences in HTML parser implementations by different vendors.
For example, on Windows Chromium browsers the Standardized Variant suffix U+FE0E is buggy, and such symbols are still better accompanied by CSS i.e: font-family: "Segoe UI Symbol"
to force that specific Font over the Colored Emoji (usually recognized as "Segoe UI Emoji") - which defies the purpose of U+FE0E in the first place - time will tell…
Scalable icon fonts
To circumvent problems related to unsupported characters - a viable solution is to use scalable icon font-sets like i.e:
Font Awesome
<link rel="stylesheet" href="https://maxcdn.bootstrapcdn.com/font-awesome/4.3.0/css/font-awesome.min.css">
<i class="fa fa-arrows-alt"></i>
<i class="fa fa-backward"></i>
<i class="fa fa-compress"></i>
<i class="fa fa-eject"></i>
<i class="fa fa-expand"></i>
<i class="fa fa-fast-backward"></i>
<i class="fa fa-fast-forward"></i>
<i class="fa fa-forward"></i>
<i class="fa fa-pause"></i>
<i class="fa fa-play"></i>
<i class="fa fa-play-circle"></i>
<i class="fa fa-play-circle-o"></i>
<i class="fa fa-step-backward"></i>
<i class="fa fa-step-forward"></i>
<i class="fa fa-stop"></i>
<i class="fa fa-youtube-play"></i>
Google Icons
<link href="https://fonts.googleapis.com/icon?family=Material+Icons" rel="stylesheet">
<i class="material-icons">pause</i>
<i class="material-icons">pause_circle_filled</i>
<i class="material-icons">pause_circle_outline</i>
<i class="material-icons">fast_forward</i>
<i class="material-icons">fast_rewind</i>
<i class="material-icons">fiber_manual_record</i>
<i class="material-icons">play_arrow</i>
<i class="material-icons">play_circle_filled</i>
<i class="material-icons">play_circle_outline</i>
<i class="material-icons">skip_next</i>
<i class="material-icons">skip_previous</i>
<i class="material-icons">replay</i>
<i class="material-icons">repeat</i>
<i class="material-icons">stop</i>
<i class="material-icons">loop</i>
<i class="material-icons">mic</i>
<i class="material-icons">volume_up</i>
<i class="material-icons">volume_down</i>
<i class="material-icons">volume_mute</i>
<i class="material-icons">volume_off</i>
and many other you can find in the wild; and last but not least, this really useful online tool: font-icons generator, Icomoon.io.
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2Annoyingly there's no "circled stop" button in the Google font/icons, so their "circled play" and "circled pause" set is incomplete...– FizzFeb 29, 2020 at 12:55
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1
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Awesome Answer - I love the effort that was put into it. Did you notice the official "ISO 7000 / IEC 60417 Symbol for Pause; Interruption is #5111B. See Media_Controls", which was pointed to by @intotecho in this underrated answer? → stackoverflow.com/a/48918561/4575793– CadoizApr 25, 2020 at 21:54
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2The text presentation selector
︎
like in▶︎
does not seem to work in Firefox and Chrome for android (2020 AC). Oct 11, 2020 at 7:11 -
The pause symbol (23F8) renders has an orange frame on Android (with font color black) and is super tall on Firefox/Chromium on Linux. Doesn't seem to be reliable cross-platform in 2021 :/– LucJun 7, 2021 at 20:59
There are various symbols which could be considered adequate replacements, including:
| | - two standard (bolded) vertical bars.
▋▋ -
▋
and another▋
▌▌ -
▌
and another▌
▍▍ -
▍
and another▍
▎▎ -
▎
and another▎
❚❚ -
❚
and another❚
I may have missed out one or two, but I think these are the better ones. Here's a list of symbols just in case.
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-
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1@JoshuaD if you want to support multiple browsers, you probably shouldn't use that one. I am using the latest Firefox and it isn't readable. Mar 11, 2018 at 12:28
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9
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1@AChildofGod - it's not (only) about the browser, it depends on the fonts installed on your machine.– kubiSep 16, 2019 at 19:41
Following may come in handy:
- ⏩
⏩
- ⏪
⏪
- ⏫
⓫
- ⏬
⏬
- ⏭
⏭
- ⏮
⏮
- ⏯
⏯
- ⏴
⏴
- ⏵
⏵
- ⏶
⏶
- ⏷
⏷
- ⏸
⏸
- ⏹
⏹
- ⏺
⏺
NOTE: apparently, these characters aren't very well supported in popular fonts, so if you plan to use it on the web, be sure to pick a webfont that supports these.
▐▐ is HTML and is made with this code: ▐▐
.
I found it, it’s in the Miscellaneous Technical block. ⏸ (U+23F8)
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3Not sure how the right answer got downvoted. See link below where this "double vertical bar" is also noted as "pause" in its comments. Too bad it doesn't seem to be well supported in the fonts (added to Unicode in June 2014). fileformat.info/info/unicode/char/23f8/index.htm– AnmDec 5, 2014 at 15:50
If you want one that's a single character to match the right-facing triangle for "play," try Roman numeral 2. Ⅱ is Ⅱ
in HTML. If you can put formatting tags around it, it looks really good in bold. Ⅱ is <b>Ⅱ</b>
in HTML. This has much better support than the previously mentioned double vertical bar.
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I'm glad you mentioned making it bold. I'm using ॥ and it looks better in bold.– efreedDec 16, 2017 at 5:02
Modern browsers support 'DOUBLE VERTICAL BAR' (U+23F8), too:
http://www.fileformat.info/info/unicode/char/23f8/index.htm
For a music player it can act as a companion for 'BLACK RIGHT-POINTING POINTER' (U+25BA) because they both share equal width and height making it perfect for a play/pause button:
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1On mac double vertical bar is surrounded by a skeuomorphic box looks different from black right-pointing pointer.– WillAug 11, 2017 at 18:04
There is no character encoded for use as a pause symbol, though various characters or combinations of characters may look more or less like a pause symbol, depending on font.
In a discussion in the public Unicode mailing list in 2005, a suggestion was made to use two copies of the U+275A HEAVY VERTICAL BAR character: ❚❚. But the adequacy of the result depends on font; for example, the glyph might have been designed so that the bars are too much apart. – The list discussion explains why a pause symbol had not been encoded, and this has not changed.
Thus, the best option is to use an image. If you need to use the symbol in text, it is best to create it in a suitably large size (say 60 by 60 pixels) and scale it down to text size with CSS (e.g., setting height: 0.8em
on the img
element).
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You can also add some CSS like "letter-spacing: -6px" to the double Heavy Vertical Bar, so it it looks more like a real pause symbol. Example: jsfiddle.net/enKaA– JaGoMay 12, 2014 at 8:20
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2This answer is obsolete. Unicode 7.0 (released 2014) has added U+23F8 and matching symbols (play, stop, record) precisely for this purpose unicode.org/charts/PDF/Unicode-7.0/U70-2300.pdf– FizzFeb 29, 2020 at 12:02
The ISO 7000 / IEC 60417 Symbol for Pause; Interruption is #5111B. See Media_Controls
I found a good option similar to the others but exact with the span tag. You can apply
<span>▐</span>▐
with no spaces.
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1You are missing the 'x' after '#'. You should test before posting. Mar 11, 2022 at 23:12
Simply II looks good! Other idea:
- Pause II: just two capital letters i, ie. roman two (font dependent, needs sans serif)
- Pause II: as before, but bold
- Pause ll: two small letters L
- Pause ||: two vertical bars
- Pause ": quote
- Pause ᐦ: 0x1426 Canadian syllabics final double short vertical strokes
- Pause ‖: 0x2016 double vertical line*
Partly inspried by https://shapecatcher.com.
<div style="font-family: Roboto">
Pause II: just two capital letters i (font dependent, needs sans serif)<br>
Pause <b>II</b>: as before, but bold<br>
Pause ll: two small letters L<br>
Pause ||: two vertical bars<br>
Pause ": quote<br>
Pause ᐦ: 0x1426 Canadian syllabics final double short vertical strokes<br>
Pause ‖: 0x2016 double vertical line<br>
<div/>