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π–Š

Mathematical Bold Fraktur Small E Symbol

π–Š is the Mathematical Bold Fraktur small E character (U+1D58A) used for distinctive math-style typography.

U+1D58A

π–Š (U+1D58A) is a Unicode character from the Mathematical Bold Fraktur set. It’s commonly used when you want a bold, fraktur-styled lowercase β€œe” look. You can copy it directly into math text, design mockups, or UI labels.

Mathematical Bold Fraktur Small E Symbol Meaning

π–Š is the Unicode character β€œMATHEMATICAL BOLD FRAKTUR SMALL E” (code point U+1D58A). As a math-styled letter, it’s typically used to represent a lowercase variable or symbolic label with a specific typographic emphasis. Because it belongs to the β€œMathematical Bold Fraktur” style, it helps distinguish one set of variables from others in equations, notation, or explanatory text. Outside of formal math, designers and writers sometimes use it as an eye-catching typographic element to label concepts, names, or headings in a consistent, themed style.

Common uses

  • β€’Labeling math variables in typeset-like text where a fraktur bold lowercase e is desired
  • β€’Creating styled identifiers in dashboards, math apps, or education content
  • β€’Designing decorative typographic elements for posters, thumbnails, and branding mockups
  • β€’Using as a distinctive character in UI badges, tags, or section headings
  • β€’Adding typographic flair to social posts or captions that reference equations or symbols

Examples

π–Š β€” Mathematical Bold Fraktur Small E

  • π–ŠLet π–Š be a parameter.
  • π–ŠCompute π–Š for the given inputs.
  • π–ŠThe eigenvalue is associated with π–Š.
  • π–ŠUse π–Š to denote the small-e quantity.
  • π–ŠSubstitute π–Š into the expression.

Variations

Ready to copy

Technical codes

UnicodeU+1D58A
HTML Entity𝖊
HTML Code𝖊
CSS\1D58A

FAQ

What is the Unicode code point for π–Š?

π–Š is U+1D58A (MATHEMATICAL BOLD FRAKTUR SMALL E).

How can I copy π–Š from this page?

Copy the character shown as π–Š directly, or use one of the provided variations (HTML, CSS, or JavaScript escape forms).

What does this character look like compared to a normal e?

It’s a lowercase β€œe” styled in Mathematical Bold Fraktur, so it has a distinctive gothic/fraktur appearance while remaining lowercase.

Will π–Š display correctly in all fonts?

Not always. Display depends on font support for the Mathematical Bold Fraktur block. If it doesn’t render, try a font that supports Unicode math alphabets.