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🆜

Squared Second Screen Letter

🆜 is the “Squared Second Screen” emoji used to indicate a secondary display or viewing panel.

U+1F19C

🆜 is a Unicode emoji labeled “SQUARED SECOND SCREEN” (U+1F19C). It’s commonly used in digital contexts to represent a second screen or companion display.

Squared Second Screen Letter Meaning

The 🆜 “Squared Second Screen” symbol (Unicode U+1F19C) typically represents a secondary screen or companion display. It can be used to suggest a “second display” mode, a mirrored/extended screen concept, or an additional viewing area alongside a primary screen. Because it’s an emoji-style icon in the “Enclosed & Circled” category, it often reads clearly in messaging and UI callouts where you want to reference multi-screen or extra-display experiences. In practice, people use it for tips, settings descriptions, and support messages related to external displays, companion apps, or “screen 2” workflows.

Common uses

  • Labeling a companion display in product or app onboarding
  • Indicating “second screen” settings in guides and help articles
  • Tagging content that should be viewed on an external or secondary display
  • Signposting multi-screen workflows in UX mockups or UI reviews
  • Adding quick visual cues in tickets and support chats

Examples

🆜 Squared Second Screen

  • 🆜Connect your device to set up 🆜 (second screen) mode.
  • 🆜Open the dashboard on your main screen and controls on 🆜.
  • 🆜If the video is on screen 2, check 🆜 settings.
  • 🆜Use 🆜 to view companion content while you work.
  • 🆜Switch to 🆜 to extend your workspace to another display.

Variations

Technical codes

UnicodeU+1F19C
HTML Entity🆜
HTML Code🆜
CSS\1F19C

FAQ

What does 🆜 mean?

🆜 is the “Squared Second Screen” symbol. It usually indicates a secondary or companion display (often “screen 2”).

What is the Unicode code point for 🆜?

The Unicode code point for 🆜 is U+1F19C.

How do I copy 🆜?

Select the symbol (🆜) from this page and copy/paste into your text, design tool, or web editor.

Can I use 🆜 in HTML or JavaScript?

Yes. HTML entity is 🆜. CSS escape is \\1F19C, and JavaScript escape is \\u{1F19C}.