Copy, type, and use

AC Voltage Symbol (V~)

V~ is a two-character notation used on instruments, tables, and technical labels to indicate alternating voltage. It combines LATIN CAPITAL LETTER V with TILDE.

Character
V~
Unicode
U+0056 U+007E

Ac Voltage Symbol Copy and Paste

Press the Copy button beside V~, then paste it with Ctrl+V on Windows, Command+V on Mac, or the Paste command on mobile.

Copy the ac voltage symbol One click copies the exact Unicode character.
  1. 1
    Copy

    Press the button to copy V~.

  2. 2
    Place the cursor

    Open the message, document, form, or profile where you need it.

  3. 3
    Paste

    Use Ctrl+V, Command+V, or the mobile Paste command.

EquationsLaboratory reportsEngineering notesTechnical education

What Is the Ac Voltage Symbol?

The sequence V~ is a practical AC-voltage label rather than one precomposed Unicode symbol. Its interpretation depends on the electrical document, instrument legend, or applicable standard.

Equations

Laboratory reports

Engineering notes

Technical education

Ac Voltage Symbol Variants and Related Forms

DC voltage

Direct-voltage label

RMS voltage

Effective AC value

Peak voltage

Maximum waveform magnitude

Alternating Current Symbol ⏦

⏦ is U+23E6 AC CURRENT, an encoded technical character used to represent…

Alternating Current Symbol ~

The tilde ~ is a common plain-text approximation for an alternating-current waveform…

Volt Symbol V

V is the SI unit symbol for volt, the derived unit of…

Electric Current Symbol I

The capital Latin letter I commonly denotes electric current; current values are…

Frequency Symbol f

The lowercase Latin letter f commonly denotes ordinary frequency, measured in hertz…

How to Type the Ac Voltage Symbol

Choose your device or app to insert the ac voltage symbol without copying it from another page.

Ac Voltage Symbol on Windows

Copy V~ from this page or enter the complete sequence U+0056 U+007E in a Unicode-aware editor.

Ac Voltage Symbol on Mac

Open Character Viewer with Control+Command+Space and search for the first character name, or copy V~ from this page.

Ac Voltage Symbol on iPhone and iPad

Tap the copy button for V~, then paste it into the target app. Save it as a text replacement for repeated use.

Ac Voltage Symbol on Android

Tap the copy button for V~, then paste it into the target app. Save it as a text replacement for repeated use.

Ac Voltage Symbol on Chromebook

Copy V~ as the complete sequence so its component characters remain in order.

Ac Voltage Symbol on Microsoft Word

Insert or type each character in the sequence U+0056 U+007E, or paste V~ as a complete unit.

Ac Voltage Symbol on Google Docs

Use Insert > Special characters and search by the Unicode name, or paste V~ from this page.

Ac Voltage Symbol Unicode and HTML Codes

Use these values when you need the ac voltage symbol in HTML, CSS, source code, or a character reference.

Unicode U+0056 U+007E
Unicode name LATIN CAPITAL LETTER V + TILDE
HTML decimal V ~
HTML hex V ~
CSS escape 56 7E

How to Use and Format the Ac Voltage Symbol

Format AC Voltage Notation according to its documented role in electrical labels and instrument ranges. The copyable form on this page is V~, with the technical identity U+0056 U+007E. Surrounding labels, equations, units, or interface text must explain what the character means in the specific document. V~ is a composed label, not a universal precomposed Unicode symbol or a complete statement of RMS, peak, or frequency. When appearance varies by font or emoji vendor, preserve the encoded text and test the final destination rather than selecting a substitute only because it looks similar.

  • Copy V~ as the complete sequence U+0056 U+007E and verify it after pasting.

  • Use a nearby label that names AC Voltage Notation when the meaning is not obvious from context.

  • Keep V~ distinct from DC voltage notation, the alternating-current character ⏦, and a drawn sine wave.

  • Follow the notation, style guide, or interface convention that governs electrical labels and instrument ranges.

  • Use literal UTF-8 text or the documented HTML references V ~ and V ~.

  • Do not rely on color, font design, or emoji artwork as the only carrier of meaning.

  • Provide accessible wording for controls, equations, measurements, or status messages that use V~.

Ac Voltage Symbol Examples

  • Input rating: 230 V~
  • Meter range: 600 V~
  • AC test point: V~
  • Supply label: 120 V~ 60 Hz
  • Compare with DC label: V⎓
  • Equation notation: V_AC
  • Copy form: V~
  • Unicode sequence: U+0056 U+007E
  • HTML decimal: V ~
  • HTML hexadecimal: V ~

Common Ac Voltage Symbol Mistakes

  • Using DC voltage notation, the alternating-current character ⏦, and a drawn sine wave without checking the intended role of AC Voltage Notation.
  • Changing the capitalization, code point, or sequence of V~ during copy and paste.
  • Assuming AC Voltage Notation has one universal meaning outside electrical labels and instrument ranges.
  • Relying on the glyph alone when a reader needs a written label or quantity definition.
  • Treating vendor-specific artwork or font styling as part of the encoded identity of V~.
  • Replacing V~ with a screenshot when searchable text is the better format.
  • Omitting the page boundary: V~ is a composed label, not a universal precomposed Unicode symbol or a complete statement of RMS, peak, or frequency.
  • Failing to verify U+0056 U+007E after conversion, export, or content import.

AC Voltage Notation: identity and scope

V~ is the reviewed text form for this page, with technical reference U+0056 U+007E. V~ is a composed label, not a universal precomposed Unicode symbol or a complete statement of RMS, peak, or frequency.

Characters and notations near AC Voltage Notation

Compare V~ with DC voltage notation, the alternating-current character ⏦, and a drawn sine wave. Choose the form required by electrical labels and instrument ranges, not merely the closest visual shape.

More About the Ac Voltage Symbol

AC voltage notation is often written as V~, a sequence made from the capital letter V followed by a tilde. The two code points are U+0056 and U+007E. Equipment panels, meter ranges, wiring notes, and compact tables may use this form to distinguish alternating voltage from a direct-voltage label.

The notation is not a universal standalone symbol. Some technical styles place a tilde over a voltage variable, use V_AC, or identify a root-mean-square value such as V_rms. A document should follow the convention defined by its instrument, standard, or engineering discipline. V~ should not be assumed to communicate frequency, phase, waveform shape, or a measured RMS value without supporting text.

Keep the distinction between quantity and unit clear. Voltage may be represented by a variable such as V or U, while the unit volt uses the upright symbol V after a number. In a label like “Input: 230 V~,” the tilde signals alternating supply context; in an equation, a properly typeset variable or subscript is usually more precise.

Copy V~ as the exact two-character sequence and check that neither character changes during import. HTML can use V~ directly, V~, or V~. Avoid replacing the tilde with a wave emoji, the alternating-current character ⏦, or a decorative sine graphic unless the target specification explicitly requires that different form.

Ac Voltage Symbol FAQ

What is the exact copyable form of AC Voltage Notation?

AC Voltage Notation uses V~, recorded as U+0056 U+007E.

How do I copy V~?

Copy the complete character or sequence V~, paste it into the destination, and verify U+0056 U+007E.

Which HTML codes reproduce V~?

Use literal UTF-8 text, decimal V ~, or hexadecimal V ~.

What should V~ not be confused with?

Keep it separate from DC voltage notation, the alternating-current character ⏦, and a drawn sine wave; those forms can have different identities or uses.

Does V~ work as a complete label by itself?

Not always. In electrical labels and instrument ranges, add the wording, unit, equation, or accessible name needed to make the intended role clear.