Asterisk Symbol Copy and Paste
Press the Copy button beside *, then paste it with Ctrl+V on Windows, Command+V on Mac, or the Paste command on mobile.
Explore and symbol font on the homepage to find more Unicode symbols and collections.
- 1Copy
Press the button to copy *.
- 2Place the cursor
Open the message, document, form, or profile where you need it.
- 3Paste
Use Ctrl+V, Command+V, or the mobile Paste command.
What Is the Asterisk Symbol?
* is U+002A ASTERISK. It is used for footnotes, wildcards, emphasis conventions, required-field markers, and operators whose meaning depends on context.
Footnote markers
Search wildcards
Required fields
Programming operators
Related forms
Asterisk Symbol Variants and Related Forms
Low asterisk
A distinct typographic asterisk
Star operator
A mathematical operator
Black star
A decorative star symbol
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Trademark Symbol (™)
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Plus Symbol (+)
The plus symbol is +. + is U+002B PLUS SIGN. It commonly…
Minus Symbol −
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Right Arrow Symbol →
Right Arrow Symbol is → (U+2192 RIGHTWARDS ARROW), a horizontal arrow used…
How to Type the Asterisk Symbol
Choose your device or app to insert the asterisk symbol without copying it from another page.
Asterisk Symbol on Windows
In Microsoft Word, type 002A and press Alt+X. In other Windows apps, use Character Map or copy * from this page.
Asterisk Symbol on Mac
Open Character Viewer with Control+Command+Space and search for “asterisk,” or copy *.
Asterisk Symbol on iPhone and iPad
Tap the copy button for *, then paste it into the target app. Save it as a text replacement for repeated use.
Asterisk Symbol on Android
Tap the copy button for *, then paste it into the target app. Save it as a text replacement for repeated use.
Asterisk Symbol on Chromebook
On ChromeOS with Unicode input enabled, press Ctrl+Shift+U, type 2a, then press Enter; otherwise copy *.
Asterisk Symbol on Microsoft Word
Type 002A, then press Alt+X to convert the code to *.
Asterisk Symbol on Google Docs
Use Insert > Special characters and search the Unicode name, or paste * from this page.
Asterisk Symbol Unicode and HTML Codes
Use these values when you need the asterisk symbol in HTML, CSS, source code, or a character reference.
U+002A
ASTERISK
*
*
2A
How to Use and Format the Asterisk Symbol
Format * according to its role on this page. * is U+002A ASTERISK. It is used for footnotes, wildcards, emphasis conventions, required-field markers, and operators whose meaning depends on context. For asterisk symbol content, verify the encoded form U+002A, preserve the complete character sequence, and choose a font that supports the intended text or emoji presentation. For asterisk symbol usage, the placement, spacing, capitalization, and surrounding words should follow the discipline or publication style described below.
This page covers the ASCII asterisk *, not the multiplication sign ×, the star operator ⋆, or decorative star characters such as ★. When * communicates an action, measurement, identity, warning, category, or other essential information, provide nearby readable text and an accessible name. Test asterisk symbol copy-and-paste behavior in the actual website, document, app, and export format rather than assuming a visual match is sufficient.
Define wildcard behavior in the application using it
Place footnote asterisks according to the publication style
Use × or proper math markup when a multiplication sign is required
Give required fields a text explanation, not only an asterisk
Use the exact encoded form U+002A for asterisk symbol content.
Publish * as UTF-8 text or complete numeric character references.
Test * in the target font, application, and assistive-technology workflow.
Asterisk Symbol Examples
Footnote*Search: file*.csvRequired field: Email *Pointer declaration: char *pMultiplication in plain code: a*bUnicode sequence for Asterisk Symbol: U+002AHTML decimal: *HTML hexadecimal: *CSS escapes: 2AAccessible text label: Asterisk Symbol
Common Asterisk Symbol Mistakes
- Using * as a universal multiplication sign
- Leaving a footnote marker without a matching note
- Assuming every search tool treats * as the same wildcard
- Marking required fields only by color and *
- Replacing asterisk symbol with a lookalike without checking U+002A.
- Assuming * has identical artwork or metrics in every font and platform.
- Converting * to an image when selectable text is more appropriate.
- Using * as the only accessible name of an interactive control.
Intent differentiation
Asterisk Symbol intent boundary
This page covers the ASCII asterisk *, not the multiplication sign ×, the star operator ⋆, or decorative star characters such as ★.
More About the Asterisk Symbol
Asterisk Symbol is * (U+002A ASTERISK), a basic ASCII character with several well-defined text roles. It may mark a footnote, stand for a wildcard in a search pattern, identify a required form field, or act as an operator in a programming language. The surrounding system determines which reading applies. Examples include “Footnote*,” “file*.csv,” “Email *,” and “char *p.” These strings should not be treated as interchangeable. A wildcard pattern follows the rules of the search tool; a pointer declaration follows the programming language; a footnote marker must lead to a corresponding note. Do not assume * is the preferred multiplication sign in mathematical publishing. Plain code may use a*b, while typeset mathematics often uses ×, ·, or no visible operator. The asterisk also differs from star-shaped dingbats and from a bullet used only for decoration. For accessible forms, do not rely on the mark alone to communicate that a field is required. Include visible wording and the appropriate form semantics. HTML can store the literal character * or use * and *. Before release, test the exact context that uses the mark, confirm U+002A after paste, and verify that the page remains about the asterisk character rather than a generic star symbol. * is U+002A ASTERISK. It is used for footnotes, wildcards, emphasis conventions, required-field markers, and operators whose meaning depends on context. For Asterisk Symbol, * is encoded as U+002A, and its Unicode name is ASTERISK. Use * in contexts such as Footnote markers, Search wildcards, Required fields, Programming operators. For Asterisk Symbol, the surrounding words should make the intended meaning clear. You can use Asterisk Symbol in forms such as Footnote*; Search: file*.csv; Required field: Email *; Pointer declaration: char *p. Check the pasted result in the final font and application. Avoid these common Asterisk Symbol problems: Using * as a universal multiplication sign; Leaving a footnote marker without a matching note; Assuming every search tool treats * as the same wildcard. Asterisk Symbol display and accessibility checks include the following: Define wildcard behavior in the application using it; Use × or proper math markup when a multiplication sign is required; Give required fields a text explanation, not only an asterisk. Asterisk Symbol on Windows: In Microsoft Word, type 002A and press Alt+X. In other Windows apps, use Character Map or copy * from this page. Asterisk Symbol on Mac: Open Character Viewer with Control+Command+Space and search for “asterisk,” or copy *. Asterisk Symbol on iPhone: Tap the copy button for *, then paste it into the target app. Save it as a text replacement for repeated use.
Continue exploring: Star Symbol (★) , Copyright Symbol (©) , Trademark Symbol (™) and Plus Symbol (+) . You can also browse all symbols.
Asterisk Symbol FAQ
What is the asterisk symbol?
* is U+002A ASTERISK. It is used for footnotes, wildcards, emphasis conventions, required-field markers, and operators whose meaning depends on context.
What is the Unicode for *?
The encoded form is U+002A: ASTERISK.
How do I type *?
Windows: In Microsoft Word, type 002A and press Alt+X. In other Windows apps, use Character Map or copy * from this page. Mac: Open Character Viewer with Control+Command+Space and search for “asterisk,” or copy *.
Is * the multiplication sign?
It can act as an operator in code and plain text, but the dedicated multiplication sign is ×.
Can I use * on a website?
Yes. Use literal UTF-8 text or the complete numeric references * / *, and add a readable label when meaning is not obvious.