Mathematical Sans-serif Bold Capital Epsilon Symbol
π is a Unicode math letter: Mathematical Sans-Serif Bold Capital Epsilon (U+1D75A).
U+1D75A
π (U+1D75A) is a Unicode character from the Mathematical Alphanumeric Symbols set. Itβs commonly used when you need a bold, sans-serif styled capital epsilon for equations or typography. Use the copy options below to paste it in documents, designs, and code.
Mathematical Sans-serif Bold Capital Epsilon Symbol Meaning
π is the Unicode character named βMATHEMATICAL SANS-SERIF BOLD CAPITAL EPSILONβ with code point U+1D75A. It represents a capital epsilon in a specific stylistic form: sans-serif and bold. In practice, itβs used when authors or designers want epsilon to visually match a particular mathematical font style (for example, headings, vectors, sets, or labeled variables) rather than using a default italic or serif variant. Since itβs part of the math symbol block, itβs typically used in contexts where consistent typographic styling matters, such as technical documents, formula renderings, and UI typography.
Common uses
- β’Labeling variables in math or science documents with a bold sans-serif epsilon style
- β’Typography in equation headers or section titles where a capital epsilon is needed
- β’Designing posters or slides with consistent math-themed lettering
- β’Creating UI text or icon-like labels for math-heavy interfaces
- β’Typing custom symbols for LaTeX-like or Unicode-based formula templates
Examples
π β Mathematical Sans-Serif Bold Capital Epsilon
- πLet π denote the operator.
- πIn the matrix, π is shown in bold.
- πDefine π as the capital epsilon parameter.
- πWe compare π to the standard Ξ΅ notation.
- πThe value of π is constrained in the model.
Variations
Ready to copy
Technical codes
| Unicode | U+1D75A | |
| HTML Entity | 𝝚 | |
| HTML Code | 𝝚 | |
| CSS | \1D75A |
FAQ
What does the Mathematical Sans-serif Bold Capital Epsilon symbol mean?
π is the Unicode character named βMATHEMATICAL SANS-SERIF BOLD CAPITAL EPSILONβ with code point U+1D75A. It represents a capital epsilon in a specific stylistic form: sans-serif and bold. In practice, itβs used when authors or designers want epsilon to visually match a particular mathematical font style (for example, headings, vectors, sets, or labeled variables) rather than using a default italic or serif variant. Since itβs part of the math symbol block, itβs typically used in contexts where consistent typographic styling matters, such as technical documents, formula renderings, and UI typography.
What is the Unicode code point for π?
π is U+1D75A.
How can I copy π reliably for web or code?
Use the character itself (π), or copy its HTML entity (𝝚) or escapes like \\1D75A / \\u{1D75A} depending on your environment.
Is π the same as the regular Greek capital epsilon?
Not exactly. Itβs the mathematical sans-serif bold capital epsilon variant, so it has a distinct stylistic form even though it corresponds to capital epsilon.
Will π render correctly in all fonts?
Not always. Rendering depends on whether the font supports U+1D75A. If you see a missing-glyph box, try a math Unicode-capable font.