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Three Consecutive Equals Signs Symbol

⩶ is the three-consecutive-equals symbol used as a distinct mathematical or typographic relation mark.

U+2A76

The symbol ⩶ is also known by its Unicode name: THREE CONSECUTIVE EQUALS SIGNS. It’s commonly used when you want a relation-like mark that visually differs from a single “=” sign. This page helps you copy it and use it correctly in text and code.

Three Consecutive Equals Signs Symbol Meaning

⩶ (Unicode U+2A76) is a typographic math symbol shown as three consecutive equals signs. Because it’s a dedicated Unicode character, it can be used wherever you need that specific “triple equals” appearance rather than styling multiple “=” characters manually. In math and technical writing, triple-equals-style marks are often used to represent a special relation, emphasis, or an additional comparison-like operator distinct from “=” and “≡”. In plain text it also works as a decorative separator or to highlight an equation or rule when you want an obvious visual cue that something is being set, compared, or organized.

Common uses

  • Representing a distinct relation or comparison marker in formulas and notes
  • Creating visually consistent equation labels in documents and slides
  • Using as a typographic separator in technical writing or formatting
  • Designing UI text or badges that require a triple-equals glyph
  • Writing math-like explanations in chat messages, posts, or comments

Examples

⩶ Three consecutive equals signs

  • Set the value: x ⩶ y
  • Check condition: a ⩶ b
  • Rule delimiter: Section ⩶ Reference
  • Equation highlight: E ⩶ mc² (conceptual)
  • Mapping: left ⩶ right

Variations

Ready to copy

Technical codes

UnicodeU+2A76
HTML Entity⩶
HTML Code⩶
CSS\2A76

FAQ

What does the Three Consecutive Equals Signs symbol mean?

⩶ (Unicode U+2A76) is a typographic math symbol shown as three consecutive equals signs. Because it’s a dedicated Unicode character, it can be used wherever you need that specific “triple equals” appearance rather than styling multiple “=” characters manually. In math and technical writing, triple-equals-style marks are often used to represent a special relation, emphasis, or an additional comparison-like operator distinct from “=” and “≡”. In plain text it also works as a decorative separator or to highlight an equation or rule when you want an obvious visual cue that something is being set, compared, or organized.

What Unicode character is ⩶?

⩶ is the Unicode symbol “THREE CONSECUTIVE EQUALS SIGNS” with code point U+2A76.

How do I copy ⩶?

Select the symbol ⩶ from this page and copy/paste it. You can also use its provided HTML/CSS/JavaScript escapes if you’re working in code.

Should I type three separate '=' characters instead?

If you need the specific glyph, copy ⩶. Typing '===' may not match the look or spacing of the Unicode character in all fonts.

Where is ⩶ typically used?

It’s mainly used as a math/typographic relation marker or visual separator in technical text, documents, and UI content where a dedicated triple-equals glyph is desired.