Overline

Description Sample Unicode CSS/HTML
Overline
(markup)
Xx text-decoration: overline;
Overline
(character)
U+203E ‾, ‾
X̅x̅ (combining) U+0305 X̅
Double overline
(markup)
Xx text-decoration: overline;
 text-decoration-style: double;
Double overline
(character)
X̿x̿ (combining) U+033F X̿
Macron
(character)
¯ U+00AF ¯, ¯
X̄x̄ (combining) U+0304 X̄
X̄x̄ (precomposed) varies

An overline, overscore, or overbar, is a typographical feature of a horizontal line drawn immediately above the text. In old mathematical notation, an overline was called a vinculum, a notation for grouping symbols which is expressed in modern notation by parentheses, though it persists for symbols under a radical sign. The original use in Ancient Greek was to indicate compositions of Greek letters as Greek numerals.[1] In Latin, it indicates Roman numerals multiplied by a thousand and it forms medieval abbreviations (sigla). Marking one or more words with a continuous line above the characters is sometimes called overstriking, though overstriking generally refers to printing one character on top of an already-printed character.

An overline, that is, a single line above a chunk of text, should not be confused with the macron, a diacritical mark placed above (or sometimes below) individual letters. The macron is narrower than the character box.[2]

  1. ^ Smith, T. P. (2013). How Big is Big and How Small is Small: The Sizes of Everything and Why.
  2. ^ Wells, J.C. (2001). "Orthographic diacritics and multilingual computing". University College London. Retrieved 23 March 2014.

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