🠱

Technical information

Symbol🠱
NameUpwards triangle-headed arrow with very heavy shaft
Unicode numberU+1F831
CategoryArrows with different shaft weights
DescriptionThe Unicode character 🠱, or U+1F831, is known as the "Upwards Triangle-Headed Arrow with Very Heavy Shaft". It belongs to the "Supplemental Arrows-C" block and falls under the "Symbol, Other" category in the Unicode standard. This character visually represents an arrow pointing upwards, characterized by its triangular head. What distinguishes this arrow from others is its "very heavy shaft", meaning the body or line of the arrow is notably thicker or bolder than typical arrow symbols. This can be used in various contexts to emphasize direction, movement, or positioning with more visual weight. The specific visual representation and application of this character can vary depending on the system and context in which it's used. Its appearance can also differ based on the font and typography used.

Encoding

HTML Entity🠱
HTML Entity (hex)🠱
URL Escape Code%F0%9F%A0%B1
UTF-8 (hex)0xF0 0x9F 0xA0 0xB1
UTF-8 (binary)11110000:10011111:10100000:10110001
UTF-160xD83E 0xDC31
UTF-320x0001F831

Source Code

C, C++, and Java"\uD83E\uDC31"
CSS Code\01F831
JavaScript"\uD83E\uDC31"
Perl\x{1F831}
Python 2u"\u0001F831"
Python 3\u0001F831
Ruby\u{1F831}

Preview

This Unicode character looks like this 🠱 in sentence and in bold like this 🠱 and in italic like this 🠱.

Font size:

🠱
12px
🠱
16px
🠱
20px
🠱
28px
🠱
36px
🠱
48px
🠱
72px

CSS Property: font-weight

🠱
100
🠱
200
🠱
300
🠱
400
🠱
500
🠱
600
🠱
700
🠱
800
🠱
900

HTML Forms and Input

input
disabled input
🠱
input-group
select
button
button

Code examples in HTML and CSS

<span>&#129073;</span>

            
span {
    content: "\1F831";
}

The symbol in different fonts

🠱
-apple-system
🠱
Apple Color Emoji
🠱
Arial
🠱
BlinkMacSystemFont
🠱
Courier New
🠱
Georgia
🠱
Droid Sans
🠱
Helvetica
🠱
Noto Sans
🠱
Oxygen
🠱
Roboto
🠱
"Segoe UI"
🠱
sans-serif
🠱
Segoe UI Emoji
🠱
Segoe UI Symbol
🠱
system-ui
🠱
Times New Roman
🠱
Ubuntu
🠱
Verdana

References