⪦ Less-than Closed By Curve
Unicode U+2AA6
Unicode & Shortcodes
U+2AA6⪦⪦\2AA6\u2AA6——E2 AA A62AA6%E2%AA%A6Usage & Context
How to type Less-than Closed By Curve 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 2aa6, then press Enter. If that doesn't work, use Character Map and copy/paste.
Microsoft Office: Type 2AA6 then press Alt + X.
How to type Less-than Closed By Curve 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 Less-than Closed By Curve 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 Less-than Closed By Curve in CSS?
CSS escapes work inside the content property. This is most useful with ::before or ::after.
.symbol::after {
content: "\2AA6";
}
<span class="symbol"></span>How to add Less-than Closed By Curve in JavaScript / JSON?
Use Unicode escapes in strings for a stable, language-neutral representation.
const symbol = "\u2AA6"; console.log(symbol);
{
"symbol": "\u2AA6"
}How to add Less-than Closed By Curve in URL / Query string?
Use percent-encoding. In JavaScript, use encodeURIComponent.
https://example.com?q=%E2%AA%A6
How to add Less-than Closed By Curve 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 2AA6 and press Alt+X to convert it.
=UNICHAR(10918)
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: Supplemental Mathematical Operators.
If you see a tofu box (□) instead of the glyph, your current font doesn’t support it.