339

I have to maintain a large number of classic ASP pages, many of which have tabular data with no sort capabilities at all. Whatever order the original developer used in the database query is what you're stuck with.

I want to to tack on some basic sorting to a bunch of these pages, and I'm doing it all client side with javascript. I already have the basic script done to sort a given table on a given column in a given direction, and it works well as long as the table is limited by certain conventions we follow here.

What I want to do for the UI is just indicate sort direction with the caret character ( ^ ) and ... what? Is there a special character that is the direct opposite of a caret? The letter v won't quite cut it. Alternatively, is there another character pairing I can use?

4

18 Answers 18

570

There's ▲: ▲ and ▼: ▼

7
  • 2
    I like those caret arrows, what's the HTML character codes for the left/right version of those arrows, if exist?
    – David
    Aug 27, 2012 at 21:19
  • 4
    +1 for remembering your semicolons on HTML entities. Browsers accept without (except if there's ambiguity) and this makes my co-workers lazy.
    – jpsimons
    Oct 25, 2012 at 3:36
  • 20
    For those looking for left and right : ▸ and ◂ Nov 2, 2014 at 0:20
  • 2
    If you're looking for a better look of this arrow add a transform(scale(1,.5); to it Mar 23, 2016 at 2:02
  • 404 this answer cannot be found ;-) Sep 17, 2019 at 16:38
294

Don't forget the (logical and) and (logical or) characters, that's what I use for indicating sort direction: HTML entities ∧ & ∨ respectively.

2
  • 11
    If I were the OP, I would think this should be the answer. Arrows and carets are different, and you actually answered it with a clever solution.
    – jcd
    Mar 25, 2015 at 22:29
  • both of these characters are from utf-16 yes/no? Mar 30, 2022 at 17:00
67

There's always a lowercase "v". But seriously, aside from Unicode, all I can find would be &darr, which looks like ↓.

0
55

An upside-down circumflex is called a caron, or a háček.

It has an HTML entity in the TADS Latin-2 extension to HTML: ˇ and looks like this: ˇ which unfortunately doesn't display in the same size/proportion as the ^ caret.

Or you can use the unicode U+30C.

40

Use arrowhead:

˅˅˅˅˅˅˅˅˅˅˅˅˅˅˅˅˅˅˅˅˅

˅˅˅ Hǝɹǝ,s ɐ ɯɐʇɔɥᴉuƃ sǝʇ˙ ˅˅˅
˄˄˄ Here's a matching set. ˄˄˄

˄˄˄˄˄˄˄˄˄˄˄˄˄˄˄˄˄˄˄˄˄

"Actual size": ˅˄˅˄
(more info)


Edit: Another Option...

⋁⋁⋁⋁⋁⋁⋁⋁⋁⋁ Unicode #8897 / U+22C1 ("n-ary logical or")

⋀⋀⋀⋀⋀⋀⋀⋀⋀⋀ Unicode #8896 / U+22C0 ("n-ary logical and")

"Actual size": ⋁⋀⋁⋀

0
26

A powerful option – and one which also boosts creativity – is designing your own characters using box drawing characters.

Want a down pointing "caret"? Here's one: ╲╱

I've recently discovered them — and I take great pleasure at using such custom designed characters for labeling things all around :) .

16

You might be able to use the black triangles, Unicode values U+25b2 and U+25bc. Or the arrows, U+2191 and U+2193.

10

c# code

int i = 0;
char c = '↑';
i = (int)c;
Console.WriteLine(i); // prints 8593

int j = 0;
char d = '↓';
j = (int)d;
Console.WriteLine(j); // prints 8595
9

You might consider using Font Awesome instead of using the unicode or other icons

The code can be as simple as (a) including font-awesome e.g. <link rel="stylesheet" href="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/font-awesome/4.7.0/css/font-awesome.min.css"> (b) making a button such as <button><i class="fa fa-arrow-down"></i></button>

3
  • 3
    Today, this is definitely a viable option. In 2008 when I asked the question, that would have been a challenge. But the ability to get these late answers as tech changes is part of what makes SO awesome :) May 31, 2017 at 20:53
  • 2
    Good point. Also, just to add a reason why to use it, one possible reason to use font-awesome instead of unicode is that unicode is copy-and-pastable which I found was annoying on mobile, it would try to select when someone tapped a button with the unicode on it, while the font-awesome icons did not cause copy and paste
    – Colin D
    Jun 5, 2017 at 13:58
  • 2
    Including FontAwesome (which is quite big in size) for just a few icons seems overkill though. I would advice against it. If text-selection is your issue, consider using the HTML code in a CSS pseudo element.
    – PoeHaH
    Jan 14, 2018 at 7:27
6

I'd use a couple of tiny images. Would look better too.

Alternatively, you can try the Character Map utility that comes with Windows or try looking here.

Another solution I've seen is to use the Wingdings font for symbols. That has a lot fo arrows.

5

I did subscript capital & bolded V. It works perfectly (although it takes some effort, if it needs to be done repetitively)

Syntax:

<sub><strong>v</strong></sub>

Output:
v

2
  • 1
    This approach is not recommended as it wouldn't look like what OP wants with fonts other than 'sans' fonts.
    – Awol
    Dec 5, 2017 at 19:42
  • This lead me in the right direction. In my case, I used the ▼: &#9660; character, but with superscript + subscript. In the case of HTML, it'd look like this: <sup><sub>&#9660;</sub></sup> In my case, I am using it with Markdown, written like this: ~^▼^~
    – John T.
    May 3, 2021 at 19:30
5

The ^ (Caret - or Ascii Circumflex), produced by pressing shift + 6, does not appear to have an Ascii opposite, namely an Ascii Inverted Circumflex.

But for your alternative character pairing that also have keyboard combinations, you could use:

ˆ (Circumflex) shift + alt + i and
ˇ (Caron) shift + alt + t

Source: fileformat.info

2
  • This does not work on my Windows computer. Is this a Mac shortcut? If so, I wonder if there is a comparable shortcut in Windows. Sep 24, 2020 at 16:51
  • 1
    @SherylHohman yes. It was for a Mac. Sorry I forgot to mention that.
    – nic
    Oct 2, 2020 at 0:51
5

U+2304 DOWN ARROWHEAD, in HTML as &#8964;

3

There is no upside down caret character, but you can easily rotate the caret with CSS. This is a simple solution that looks perfect. Press 'Run code snippet' to see it in action:

.upsidedown {
transform:rotate(180deg); 
-webkit-transform:rotate(180deg);
-o-transform:rotate(180deg);
-ms-transform:rotate(180deg);
}
.upsidedown.caret {
display: inline-block; 
position:relative; 
bottom: 0.15em;
}
more items <span class="upsidedown caret">^</span>

Please note the following...

  • I did a little correction for the positioning of the caret, as it is normally high (thus low in the rotated version). You want to move it a little up. This 'little' is relative to the font-size, hence the 'em'. Depending on your font choice, you might want to fiddle with this to make it look good.
  • This solution does not work in IE8. You should use a filter if you want IE8 support. IE8 support is not really required nor common in 2018.
  • If you want to use this in combination with Twitter Bootstrap, please rename the class 'caret' to something else, like 'caret_down' (as it collides with a class name from Twitter Bootstrap).
1

So I wanted the caret exactly as in OWA, so I downloaded office365icons.woff from https://owa.example.com/owa/prem/15.1.1913.10/resources/styles/fonts/office365icons.woff (have to be logged in to do it, so did it through browser) and then, copying the boiled-down style from the website:

  @font-face {
      font-family: 'Office365Icons';
      src: url('/fonts/office365icons.woff') format('woff');
      font-weight: normal;
      font-style: normal;
  }

  span.o-icon {
      font-family: 'Office365Icons';
      font-size: 14pt;
      line-height: 21px;
      color: #666;
  }

And finally:

<span class="o-icon">&#xe088;</span>
0

If you are needing font-awesome for React Apps then React Icons is a very good resource and very easy to implement. It includes a lot more libraries than just font-awesome.

1
  • 2
    Not sure why this is downvoted. It suggests a reasonable open-source alternative to consider (albeit not as simple as a standard Unicode character).
    – Jake
    Nov 25, 2020 at 23:33
-1

Could you just draw an svg path inside of a span using document.write? The span isn't required for the svg to work, it just ensures that the svg remains inline with whatever text the carat is next to. I used margin-bottom to vertically center it with the text, there might be another way to do that though. This is what I did on my blog's side nav (minus the js). If you don't have text next to it you wouldn't need the span or the margin-bottom offset.

<div id="ID"></div>

<script type="text/javascript">
var x = document.getElementById('ID');

// your "margin-bottom" is the negative of 1/2 of the font size (in this example the font size is 16px)
// change the "stroke=" to whatever color your font is too
x.innerHTML = document.write = '<span><svg style="margin-bottom: -8px; height: 30px; width: 25px;" viewBox="0,0,100,50"><path fill="transparent" stroke-width="4" stroke="black" d="M20 10 L50 40 L80 10"/></svg></span>';
</script>
1
  • Today, I could probably do that. In 2012 I wouldn't have trusted that option. And now that I have them, I like using the Unicode characters. Apr 26, 2017 at 20:50
-1

I found these in the MacOS symbols: ▾▴ Not sure if they will look proper on all devices though.

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