Mathematical Sans-Serif Small V 𝗏
Visual Description: A small mathematical sans-serif lowercase v appears with clean, straight strokes and uniform line width. It looks neutral and modern, without heavy serifs or curves. The glyph resembles a simple variable symbol used in formulas. In digital math fonts, it sits beside other letters with minimal decoration.
Meaning & Usage: It denotes a variable or vector component in a sans-serif mathematical style. It is chosen to reduce confusion with italic variables and to align with UI themes that favor clean monochrome displays. In software, it helps distinguish formal notation from regular text and aids readability.
Historical Background: The idea of separate letter styles grew from the need to distinguish variables, constants, and vectors. Mathematicians and designers adopted sans-serif forms to reduce glare on screens and to fit compact layouts. This small v is part of a broader set that includes many stylized letters in the math block.
Practical Use: In teaching and UI tools, it can label inputs, placeholders, or results in formulas without overwhelming italics. Calculators and quick operation panels may display such letters to indicate vector components or parameter names. The symbol supports rapid comparisons and formula entry with keyboard shortcuts and small on-screen controls.
See our category page for related symbols.
Look‑alikes: v (U+76).
Need styled alternatives? Try the Fancy Text tool.
Confusables
Technical details
- Codepoint:
U+1D5CF - General Category:
Ll - Age:
3.1 - Bidi Class:
L - Decomposition:
<font> 0076 - Block:
Mathematical Alphanumeric Symbols - Script:
Common - UTF-8:
F0 9D 97 8F - UTF-16:
D835 DDCF - UTF-32:
0001D5CF - HTML dec:
𝗏 - HTML hex:
𝗏 - JS escape:
\u{1D5CF} - Python \N{}:
\N{MATHEMATICAL SANS-SERIF SMALL V} - Python \U:
\U0001D5CF - URL-encoded:
%F0%9D%97%8F - CSS escape:
\1D5CF
How to type / insert
Fast copy: click the Copy button near the top of this page.
By codepoint: in many editors and IDEs, you can insert via the Unicode code U+1D5CF or a built‑in character picker.
HTML: use the numeric entity 헏 (hex) or 헏 (decimal) when an HTML entity is needed.
Compatibility & troubleshooting
Font support: if the symbol does not render, the current font likely lacks this codepoint. Choose a font with broad Unicode coverage or allow a fallback font.
Web pages: ensure your CSS font stack includes a general fallback; avoid relying on images for common symbols to preserve accessibility and copyability.