⋅ Dot Operator
Unicode U+22C5
Unicode & Shortcodes
U+22C5⋅⋅\22C5\u22C5——E2 8B 8522C5%E2%8B%85Usage & Context
How to type Dot Operator on Mac / Windows / Linux?
Windows: Use the Emoji Panel (Win + .), the Character Map app, or copy/paste ⋅.
macOS: Use Character Viewer (Control + Command + Space) and search by name, or copy/paste.
Linux: In many Linux apps, press Ctrl + Shift + U, type 22c5, then press Enter. If that doesn't work, use Character Map and copy/paste.
Microsoft Office: Type 22C5 then press Alt + X.
How to type Dot Operator on iOS / Android?
On iOS, long-press the globe/emoji key and search in the symbol picker, or paste the symbol.
On Android, open the symbols keyboard or use your app’s character panel, then paste.
How to add Dot Operator in HTML?
Best practice is to include the literal character and serve your page as UTF-8. Use numeric references (or a named HTML entity, if available) only when you need an ASCII-only representation.
<meta charset="utf-8" /> <span>⋅ symbol</span>
<span>⋅ symbol</span>
<span>⋅ symbol</span>
<span>⋅ symbol</span>
How to add Dot Operator in CSS?
CSS escapes work inside the content property. This is most useful with ::before or ::after.
.symbol::after {
content: "\22C5";
}
<span class="symbol"></span>How to add Dot Operator in JavaScript / JSON?
Use Unicode escapes in strings for a stable, language-neutral representation.
const symbol = "\u22C5"; console.log(symbol);
{
"symbol": "\u22C5"
}How to add Dot Operator in URL / Query string?
Use percent-encoding. In JavaScript, use encodeURIComponent.
https://example.com?q=%E2%8B%85
How to add Dot Operator in Word / Google Docs / Excel?
In Word or Google Docs, go to Insert → Symbol (or Special Characters) and search the Unicode name.
In Word, you can type 22C5 and press Alt+X to convert it.
=UNICHAR(8901)
Encoding notes
UTF-8 and UTF-16 byte sequences are listed above for developer tools, debugging, or data pipelines.
Related Symbols
More in Math & OperatorsNotes
Font tips (if you see □)
- Windows: try fonts like Segoe UI Symbol.
- macOS: try Apple Symbols / Symbol fonts, or install Noto.
- Linux: install Noto fonts (Symbols / Symbols 2) or DejaVu Sans.
Unicode block: Mathematical Operators.
Confusables: visually similar characters that may be mistaken for this symbol in some fonts.
If you see a tofu box (□) instead of the glyph, your current font doesn’t support it.