Best way to encode Degree Celsius symbol into web page?

Try to replace it with °, and also to set the charset to utf-8, as Martin suggests.

°C will get you something like this:

Degrees Celsius


If you really want to use the DEGREE CELSIUS character “℃”, then copy and paste is OK, provided that your document is UTF-8 encoded and declared as such in HTTP headers. Using the character reference ℃ would work equally well, and would work independently of character encoding, but the source would be much less readable.

The problem with Blackberry is most probably a font issue. I don’t know about fonts on Blackberry, but the font repertoire might be limited. There’s nothing you can do about this in HTML, but you can use CSS, possibly with @font face.

But there is seldom any reason to use the DEGREE CELSIUS. It is a compatibility character, included in Unicode due to its use in East Asian writing. The Unicode Standard explicitly says in Chapter 15 (section 15.2, page 497):

“In normal use, it is better to represent degrees Celsius “°C” with a sequence of U+00B0 degree sign + U+0043 latin capital letter c, rather than U+2103 degree celsius.”

The degree sign “°” can be entered in many ways, including the entity reference `°, but normally it is best to insert it as a character, via copy and paste or otherwise. On Windows, you can use Alt 0176.

Caveat: Some browsers may treat the degree sign as allowing a line break after it even when no space intervenes, putting “°” and the following “C” on separate lines. There are different ways to prevent this. A simple and effective method is this: <nobr>42 °C</nobr>.


Using sup on the letter "o" and a capital "C"

<sup>o</sup>C

Should work in all browsers and IE6+

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