welcome to page number weird character test



I will test ampersand. "&", n\" ", phrases with " ' " in them, phrases with "< \ > in them"

I will test ampersand. "&", n\" ", phrases with " ' " in them, phrases with "< \ > in them"

Here is an issue that i found on ourboox, in my book (remember you will find more issues there)


As easy as clicking <Source code> in the book editor,


that text should match this one:


As easy as clicking in the book editor,

&quot;
"Double quote
&amp;
&Ampersand ("and" sign)
&lt;
<Less-than
&gt;
>Greater-than
&nbsp;
un-linebreak-able space
&iexcl;
¡Upside-down !
&cent;
¢Cent sign (c crossed out)
&pound;
£Pound sign: the currency symbol
not the tic-tac-toe telephone symbol, which is incorrectly called "pound".
&curren;
¤circle with dashes at NE, SE, SW, and NW
&yen;
¥Y crossed out
&brvbar;
¦Vertical line, maybe with gap in middle
&sect;
§Section sign (like hurricane symbol on weather maps)
&uml;
¨Two dots up in the air
&copy;
©Copyright sign (C in a circle)
&ordf;
ªlower case "a" up in the air
&laquo;
«Two small less-than signs: the German open-quote
&not;
¬Not sign from classical logic
&shy;
­"Soft" hyphen: a dash
&reg;
®Registered sign (R in a circle)
&macr;
¯Macron (horizontal line up in the air)
&deg;
°Degree sign
&plusmn;
±Plus-or-minus sign
&sup2
²2 up in the air
&sup3;
³3 up in the air
&acute;
´Little dash pointing to North-East
&micro;
µMicro sign, lower case Greek Mu
&para;
Paragraph sign (mirror image capital P with two legs and a black eye)
&middot;
·Decimal Point (English style, mid-level)
&cedil;
¸Small sickle shape, low down
&sup1;
¹1 up in the air
&ordm;
ºlower case "o" up in the air
&raquo;
»Two small greater-than signs: the German close-quote
&frac14;
¼One quarter
&frac12;
½One half
&frac34;
¾Three quarters
&iquest;
¿Upside-down ?
&times;
×Times sign: narrow x without serifs
&divide;
÷Division sign: a colon : with a dash through it
&ETH;
ÐOld English voiced "Th", "D" with dash through upright
&eth;
ðOld Englished voiced "th": bendy "d" with dash through tail
&THORN;
ÞOld English unvoiced "Th": "P" but loop has slipped down
&thorn;
þOld English unvoiced "th": smaller version of the above
&AElig;
Æ"A" and "E" in a ligature, as in ENCYCLOPAEDIA
&aelig;
æ"a" and "e" in a ligature, as in "encyclopaedia"
&OElig;
Œ"O" and "E" in a ligature, as in MANOEUVRE
&oelig;
œ"o" and "e" in a ligature, as in "manoeuvre"
&Aring;
Å"A" with a little circle above: Angstrom sign
&Oslash;
Ø"O" with diagonal line through: Empty set sign
&Ccedil;
Ç"C" with cedilla (sickle shape) underneath
&ccedil;
ç"c" with cedilla (sickle shape) underneath
&szlig;
ßGerman "sz" ligature, like a lower case Greek Beta
&Ntilde;
ÑN with wiggle on top
&ntilde;
ñn with wiggle on top
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