Black Right Pointing Isosceles Right Triangle
Copy and paste the black right pointing isosceles right triangle symbol 🞂 (U+1F782) instantly. Part of the Geometric Shapes Extended Unicode block.
Works everywhere: websites, documents, social media, code editors
Character Codes
About This Symbol
- Name
- Black Right Pointing Isosceles Right Triangle
- Unicode Block
- Geometric Shapes Extended
- Code Point
- U+1F782
The Black Right Pointing Isosceles Right Triangle (🞂) is a Unicode character assigned to the Geometric Shapes Extended block at code point U+1F782. This block contains characters used across a variety of applications including technical documentation, web development, mathematical notation, and everyday digital communication. The black right pointing isosceles right triangle symbol can be inserted directly into text or referenced through its HTML entity, CSS code, or JavaScript escape sequence for use in websites and applications.
How to Use
- 1.Click "Copy Symbol" above to copy 🞂 to your clipboard
- 2.Paste it anywhere with Ctrl+V (or Cmd+V on Mac)
- 3.Or use the HTML entity
🞂in your code - 4.For CSS, use
\1F782with the content property
Understanding Black Right Pointing Isosceles Right Triangle
At code point U+1F782, the black right pointing isosceles right triangle (🞂) occupies a carefully chosen position within the Geometric Shapes Extended allocation. The Unicode Consortium assigned this character to address the need for a reliable, cross-platform representation of this symbol in electronic documents and interfaces.
The hexadecimal value 1F782 places this character at decimal position 128898 in the Unicode table. This position within the Geometric Shapes Extended range means it shares encoding characteristics with its neighboring characters. The CSS notation \1F782 is particularly useful in pseudo-element content properties, while \u{1F782} works in template literals and string concatenation.
Known by its descriptive name referencing "black right," this character serves a specific role that generic symbols cannot fill. It appears in specialized typography, technical standards, and digital content where precision in symbol choice directly affects meaning or layout.
About Geometric Shapes
Geometric shape characters bring the clarity of pure form into text. Circles, squares, triangles, diamonds, and their filled or outlined variants serve as versatile building blocks for data visualization, UI indicators, bullet points, and decorative elements. The extended block adds stars, crosses, and polygons that support everything from rating displays to complex diagramming within plain text environments.
Geometric symbols have appeared in printed text for centuries — printers used small squares and circles as paragraph markers and section dividers long before digital typography. The original Unicode 1.0 Geometric Shapes block codified the most common forms, drawing from existing character sets like ISO 8859 and various national standards. Unicode 7.0 introduced Geometric Shapes Extended, adding filled and outlined variants in multiple sizes, responding to demand from emoji designers and UI toolkit developers who needed these shapes as composable elements.
Common Uses
- •Bullet points and list markers in documents
- •Status indicators and traffic-light displays in dashboards
- •Rating systems using filled and empty stars or circles
- •Legend markers in charts and data visualizations
- •Card suit symbols for gaming applications
Technical Notes: Geometric shapes interact with emoji presentation in complex ways. A black medium square (U+25FC) can render as a simple glyph or as a colorful emoji depending on the platform and the presence of a variation selector. Developers must use VS15 (U+FE0E) to force text presentation or VS16 (U+FE0F) to force emoji presentation when consistent rendering matters. The extended block includes shapes specifically sized as small, medium, and large to provide proportional options within a single line of text.
Cultural Context: Geometric shapes carry symbolic weight across cultures. Triangles suggest direction, hierarchy, or the Trinity in Western traditions, while circles represent wholeness, cycles, and harmony in East Asian philosophy. The hexagram (Star of David) and pentagram carry deep religious significance. Designers working with international audiences must be aware that even basic geometric forms can evoke unintended cultural associations depending on context, color, and orientation.