ASCII Symbols Patterns

ASCII Symbols for Guides and Docs

ASCII Symbols in this collection are grouped for guides and docs, with a focus on copy-ready characters that solve a clear text problem.

18 symbols in this page

Why this page exists

ASCII pages are narrow but extremely practical. The characters are simple, but they sit inside usernames, code, plain-text formatting, shell examples, and old-school web habits. Documentation needs symbols that support clarity. The wrong mark can make a guide harder to scan instead of easier.

These characters are useful in developer notes, handles, file names, slugs, technical examples, simple text layouts, and keyboard-first writing. These pages fit tutorials, help articles, changelogs, FAQ blocks, onboarding steps, and instructional writing.

ASCII is strongest when framed by use. The value is not the raw set itself, but the way it solves compatibility and typing constraints in everyday text. The most useful doc symbols are functional and consistent, helping the reader understand hierarchy, flow, or status at a glance.

Symbols in this collection

@

At Sign

U+0040

ASCII symbols

The @ at sign appears in everyday text whenever someone wants a direct character for email addresses, social handles, direct mentions instead of a more decorative symbol.

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#

Hash Sign

U+0023

ASCII symbols

As a plain text character, the # hash sign is most useful for hashtags, topic labels, number markers where quick compatibility matters.

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$
ASCII symbols

People copy the $ dollar sign when they need a reliable text sign for prices, budgets, money labels without leaving keyboard-friendly formatting.

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%
ASCII symbols

As a plain text character, the % percent sign is most useful for percentages, discount labels, analytics summaries where quick compatibility matters.

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&

Ampersand

U+0026

ASCII symbols

As a plain text character, the & ampersand is most useful for titles, paired names, brand copy where quick compatibility matters.

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*

Asterisk

U+002A

ASCII symbols

People copy the * asterisk when they need a reliable text sign for footnotes, emphasis, wildcard-style notes without leaving keyboard-friendly formatting.

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+

Plus Sign

U+002B

ASCII symbols

As a plain text character, the + plus sign is most useful for additions, plans, feature lists where quick compatibility matters.

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-
ASCII symbols

People copy the - hyphen minus when they need a reliable text sign for ranges, subtraction, joined text without leaving keyboard-friendly formatting.

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/
ASCII symbols

The / forward slash appears in everyday text whenever someone wants a direct character for paths, paired options, date-style text instead of a more decorative symbol.

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\

Backslash

U+005C

ASCII symbols

The \ backslash is a practical ascii symbol people use for escape sequences, paths, technical snippets in plain text.

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_
ASCII symbols

As a plain text character, the _ underscore is most useful for usernames, code variables, word separators where quick compatibility matters.

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~

Tilde

U+007E

ASCII symbols

The ~ tilde appears in everyday text whenever someone wants a direct character for soft tone, approximate values, playful bios instead of a more decorative symbol.

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=
ASCII symbols

The = equals sign is a practical ascii symbol people use for comparisons, simple equations, text labels in plain text.

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^

Caret

U+005E

ASCII symbols

People copy the ^ caret when they need a reliable text sign for technical notation, power expressions, plain text emphasis without leaving keyboard-friendly formatting.

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|
ASCII symbols

The | vertical bar is a practical ascii symbol people use for separators, menus, minimal layouts in plain text.

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<
ASCII symbols

The < less than sign appears in everyday text whenever someone wants a direct character for comparisons, markup-like text, technical examples instead of a more decorative symbol.

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>
ASCII symbols

The > greater than sign is a practical ascii symbol people use for comparisons, markup-like text, quotes and prompts in plain text.

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`
ASCII symbols

The ` grave accent is a practical ascii symbol people use for inline code, developer notes, plain text formatting in plain text.

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