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[[category: | [[page type::article]] | ||
[[page type::reference]] | |||
[[thing type::character format]] | |||
[[category:computer terminology]] | |||
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==About== | |||
An [[HTML entity]] is a combination of characters which will be displayed within an [[HTML]] browser as a single character. All HTML entities begin with "&" (ampersand) and end with ";" (semicolon). Many entities have mnemonic names (such as "&amp;", which displays an ampersand); any possible character can be displayed as an entity by using the format "&#<u>number</u>;" where <u>number</u> is the output character's [[ASCII]] value in decimal. | |||
==Pages== | |||
* [[/list]]: list of some of the most useful entities | |||
==Reference== | ==Reference== | ||
* {{wikipedia|Character entity reference}} | * {{wikipedia|Character entity reference}} | ||
** see also: {{l/wp|Percent-encoding}} | |||
* [http://htmlhelp.com/reference/html40/entities/ HTML 4.0 entities] | * [http://htmlhelp.com/reference/html40/entities/ HTML 4.0 entities] | ||
* [https://developers.whatwg.org/named-character-references.html#named-character-references Named character references], in alphabetical order, including newer ones not supported by most browsers | |||
* [https://www.freeformatter.com/html-entities.html HTML Entity List]: "Complete list of HTML entities with their numbers and names. Also included is a full list of ASCII characters that can be represented in HTML (i.e. printable characters)." | |||
==Questions== | |||
* Do search engines resolve html entities when indexing web pages? That is, if I spelled a word (e.g. "schmerglefrotz") entirely using html entities, would someone be able to find that page by typing "schmerglefrotz" (after the site had been spidered, of course)? (As a test, I will spell a completely different word using HTML entities, and try Googling it later: '''FRELGKLOTZ''') | |||
** '''2007-07-15 answer''': Yes, it does find it (though it took several months at least before this page got indexed). | |||
** '''2016-11-28 answer''': Searching for the word in question no longer produces any results. Neither does searching for "schmerglefrotz". | |||
==Note== | |||
* '''2017-11-11''' MediaWiki 1.28.0 apparently no longer supports the "&#d;" style of entity; you now have to use named entities. | |||
* '''2020-05-23''' This seems to have been fixed? | |||
Latest revision as of 16:14, 6 February 2025
<hide> page type::article page type::reference thing type::character format </hide>
About
An HTML entity is a combination of characters which will be displayed within an HTML browser as a single character. All HTML entities begin with "&" (ampersand) and end with ";" (semicolon). Many entities have mnemonic names (such as "&", which displays an ampersand); any possible character can be displayed as an entity by using the format "&#number;" where number is the output character's ASCII value in decimal.
Pages
- /list: list of some of the most useful entities
Reference
- Wikipedia (Character entity reference)
- see also: Percent-encoding
- HTML 4.0 entities
- Named character references, in alphabetical order, including newer ones not supported by most browsers
- HTML Entity List: "Complete list of HTML entities with their numbers and names. Also included is a full list of ASCII characters that can be represented in HTML (i.e. printable characters)."
Questions
- Do search engines resolve html entities when indexing web pages? That is, if I spelled a word (e.g. "schmerglefrotz") entirely using html entities, would someone be able to find that page by typing "schmerglefrotz" (after the site had been spidered, of course)? (As a test, I will spell a completely different word using HTML entities, and try Googling it later: FRELGKLOTZ)
- 2007-07-15 answer: Yes, it does find it (though it took several months at least before this page got indexed).
- 2016-11-28 answer: Searching for the word in question no longer produces any results. Neither does searching for "schmerglefrotz".
Note
- 2017-11-11 MediaWiki 1.28.0 apparently no longer supports the "&#d;" style of entity; you now have to use named entities.
- 2020-05-23 This seems to have been fixed?
