Euro sign

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A selection of euro signs in various fonts:  Arial, Times New Roman, Georgia, Courier New, Dominian, Futura, Manga Stone.
A selection of euro signs in various fonts: Arial, Times New Roman, Georgia, Courier New, Dominian, Futura, Manga Stone.
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Punctuation

apostrophe ( ', )
brackets ( ), [ ], { }, < >
colon ( : )
comma ( , )
dashes ( , , , )
ellipsis ( , ... )
exclamation mark ( ! )
full stop/period ( . )
guillemets ( « » )
hyphen ( -, )
question mark ( ? )
quotation marks ( ‘ ’, “ ” )
semicolon ( ; )
slash/stroke ( / )
solidus ( )

Interword separation

spaces ( ) () ()
interpunct ( · )

General typography

ampersand ( & )
asterisk ( * )
at ( @ )
backslash ( \ )
bullet ( )
caret ( ^ )
currency ( ¤ ) ¢, $, , £, ¥, ,
dagger ( ) ( )
degree ( ° )
emoticons :-)
inverted exclamation point ( ¡ )
inverted question mark ( ¿ )
number sign ( # )
percent and related signs
( %, ‰, ‱ )
pilcrow ( )
prime ( )
section sign ( § )
tilde/swung dash ( ~ )
umlaut/diaeresis ( ¨ )
underscore/understrike ( _ )
vertical/pipe/broken bar ( |, ¦ )

Uncommon typography

asterism ( )
lozenge ( )
interrobang ( )
irony mark ( ؟ )
reference mark ( )
sarcasm mark

This article is about the euro sign (€). For the article about the euro currency, click here.

The euro sign (€) is the currency sign used for the euro currency. The currency sign was presented to the public by the European Commission on December 12, 1996.

The international three-letter code (according to ISO standard ISO 4217) for the euro is EUR. A special euro currency sign (€) was also designed. After a public survey had narrowed the original ten proposals down to two, it was up to the European Commission to choose the final design. The eventual winner was a design allegedly created by a team of four experts who have not, however, been officially named. The glyph is (according to the European Commission) "a combination of the Greek epsilon [ε], as a sign of the weight of European civilisation; an E for Europe; and the parallel lines crossing through standing for the stability of the euro".[1] The official story of the design history of the euro sign is disputed by Arthur Eisenmenger, a former chief graphic designer for the EEC, who claims to have had the idea prior to the European Commission.[2] Eisenmenger's other design achievements include the flag of the European Union.[citation needed]

The euro is represented in the Unicode character set with the character name EURO SIGN and the code position U+20AC (decimal 8364) as well as in updated versions of the traditional Latin character set encodings.[2] In HTML "&euro;" can also be used. The HTML entity was only introduced with HTML 4.0; shortly after the introduction of the euro, many browsers were unable to render it.

Official graphical construction of the euro logo
Official graphical construction of the euro logo

The European Commission specified a euro logo with exact proportions and colours (PMS Yellow foreground, PMS Reflex Blue background [3]), for use in public-relations material related to the euro introduction. While the Commission intended the logo to be a prescribed glyph shape, font designers made it clear that they intended to design their own variants instead.[3]

Generating the euro sign using a computer depends on the operating system and national conventions. See keyboarding the euro sign for details. Some mobile phone companies issued an interim software update for their special SMS character set, replacing the less-frequent Japanese yen sign with the euro sign, later mobile phones have both currency signs.

[edit] Use of the sign

Placement of the sign is also an example of diversity. Partly since there are no official standards on placement,[4] countries have generated varying conventions or sustained those of their former currencies. For example, in Ireland and the Netherlands where the former currency signs (£ and ƒ, respectively) were placed before the numerical amount, the euro sign is universally placed in the same position. In many other countries, including France and Germany, an amount such as €3.50 is often written as 3,50€ or 3€50 instead, largely following conventions for their former currencies.

A large euro sign in front of the European Central Bank in Frankfurt
A large euro sign in front of the European Central Bank in Frankfurt

No "official" recommendation is made with regard to the use of a cent sign, and usage differs between and within member states. Sums are often expressed as decimals of the euro (for example €0.05 or even €–.05 rather than 5c). The most used abbreviation is "c", but other abbreviations include "ct" (partly in Germany), snt (Finland), the capital letter lambda (Λ for λεπτό, "lepto") in Greece, the American-style "¢" occasionally in Ireland (though "c" is more common, typical price guns only have "¢"), and the scientific and ISO compliant abbreviation c€.

[edit] Further reading

[edit] Footnotes

  1. ^ Our money page 3, on the web site of the European Central Bank (a PDF page)
  2. ^ For details please see the Western Latin character sets (computing).
  3. ^ See this position and [1] from 1996.
  4. ^ http://www.delidn.ec.europa.eu/en/references/references_5.htm#Q12