Mathematical Sans-serif Italic Capital X Symbol
𝘟 is the Mathematical Sans-Serif Italic Capital X (U+1D61F) for styled mathematical text.
U+1D61F
𝘟 is a Unicode math-styled character: a sans-serif italic capital X. It’s useful when you need the look of a bold math italic “X” but with the specific “mathematical sans-serif italic” styling. You can copy it directly or use its Unicode escapes in code.
Mathematical Sans-serif Italic Capital X Symbol Meaning
𝘟 is a styled Latin letter “X” from the Unicode Mathematical Alphanumeric Symbols block. The “mathematical sans-serif italic” styling distinguishes it from regular X, italic X, or serif math letters. In practice, it’s often used as a variable or label in math-like typography—such as denoting an unknown, a transformation, a coordinate axis marker, or a named parameter—especially when your design requires consistent mathematical font styling. Because it is a specific Unicode character, it will render consistently in fonts that support U+1D61F, making it convenient for copy/paste across documents and web contexts.
Common uses
- •Use in math-themed posters or infographics as a styled capital X variable
- •Label an unknown or parameter in educational content with a consistent typographic style
- •Create consistent variable notation in design mockups for charts and diagrams
- •Use in HTML/CSS text where you need a specific math-styled X character
- •Add a polished “math font” look to social posts or documentation screenshots
Examples
𝘟 — Mathematical Sans-Serif Italic Capital X
- 𝘟𝘟 = 2𝘢 + 3
- 𝘟Solve for 𝘟
- 𝘟Let 𝘟 represent an unknown parameter
- 𝘟Transform point (𝘹, 𝘺) using 𝘟
- 𝘟Coefficient 𝘟 applies to all rows
Variations
Ready to copy
Technical codes
| Unicode | U+1D61F | |
| HTML Entity | 𝘟 | |
| HTML Code | 𝘟 | |
| CSS | \1D61F |
FAQ
What does the Mathematical Sans-serif Italic Capital X symbol mean?
𝘟 is a styled Latin letter “X” from the Unicode Mathematical Alphanumeric Symbols block. The “mathematical sans-serif italic” styling distinguishes it from regular X, italic X, or serif math letters. In practice, it’s often used as a variable or label in math-like typography—such as denoting an unknown, a transformation, a coordinate axis marker, or a named parameter—especially when your design requires consistent mathematical font styling. Because it is a specific Unicode character, it will render consistently in fonts that support U+1D61F, making it convenient for copy/paste across documents and web contexts.
What Unicode character is 𝘟?
𝘟 is “MATHEMATICAL SANS-SERIF ITALIC CAPITAL X” with Unicode code point U+1D61F.
How can I copy 𝘟 reliably?
Copy the character directly from this page. For web or code, you can also use the provided escapes (HTML 𝘟, CSS \\\\1D61F, JavaScript \\u{1D61F}).
Will 𝘟 look the same on every device?
It will render correctly when the font in the user’s environment supports U+1D61F. Otherwise, it may fall back to a different glyph style or show a missing character.
Is 𝘟 different from a normal italic X?
Yes. 𝘟 is a specific Unicode math-styled character (mathematical sans-serif italic capital X), not just a typographic italic applied to a regular X.