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Star Symbol Copy Paste

Browse 18 verified Unicode star characters by official name, shape, or code point and copy the exact symbol with one click.

Privacy: your files never leave your device. All processing happens locally in your browser.

How to use

  1. 1.Search by shape, official Unicode name, character, or U+ code point.
  2. 2.Inspect the symbol, its visible shape, and the code point printed below it.
  3. 3.Click the tile and wait for the clipboard confirmation before pasting it into the destination.

About Star Symbol Copy Paste

Star Symbol Copy Paste is a focused picker for 18 Unicode characters whose official names describe stars or sparkles. Search by a visible character, code point, official name, or practical shape keyword, then click one result to copy exactly that character. Every entry shows its U+ notation so you can distinguish symbols that look similar. Filtering and clipboard interaction happen in the browser, and the tool does not upload a query or selected symbol.

The collection covers the familiar black star U+2605 and white star U+2606, followed by a bounded group from the Unicode Dingbats block. That group includes black and white four-pointed stars, outlined and shadowed forms, pinwheel forms, and several six-pointed or eight-pointed designs. Sparkles U+2728 is included because it is commonly searched alongside decorative stars and is explicitly named Sparkles by Unicode.

Names and code points are factual reference data rather than labels invented for this interface. The implementation follows the Unicode names lists for Miscellaneous Symbols and Dingbats and cross-checks those pairs against the machine-readable Unicode Character Database. Tests pin representative boundaries and shapes, verify all 18 symbols and code points are unique, and calculate each displayed code point from the stored character.

Search is intentionally literal and transparent. A query such as outline matches entries with outline-related names or keywords, while eight pointed narrows the grid to relevant eight-pointed designs. The tool does not use a language model, fuzzy ranking, popularity score, or hidden recommendation system. An empty query restores the entire curated collection.

Clicking a tile requests the standard browser clipboard permission and writes the exact symbol shown on that tile. A visible status line confirms the character after the browser accepts the operation. Browser privacy settings, an insecure embedding context, or a denied permission can prevent clipboard access; in that situation the page does not claim a successful copy.

Unicode identifies characters, but it does not require every font or platform to draw them identically. Stroke weight, spacing, corner shape, color presentation, and fallback font can change after pasting. Sparkles may receive colorful emoji presentation on some systems, while most other entries are typically monochrome text symbols. Always preview the pasted result in the destination application.

The picker does not create an image, SVG, icon font, CSS shape, rating component, or downloadable asset. Copied output remains text and inherits the destination font, color, line height, and accessibility behavior. If a design needs a guaranteed brand shape at a fixed size, use a licensed vector asset instead of assuming a Unicode glyph will render identically everywhere.

Code point labels use uppercase hexadecimal U+ notation. They describe the first and only scalar value in each stored entry; this collection excludes multi-code-point emoji sequences and variation selectors. That narrow rule makes the symbol-to-code-point relationship easy to audit and prevents a visually identical sequence from being mislabeled as one character.

The list is curated, not an exhaustive inventory of every astronomical, religious, heraldic, geometric, or emoji symbol that someone might call a star. It excludes pentagrams, star operators used in mathematics, asterisks without an official star name, celestial bodies, and newer geometric stars outside this focused set. Those exclusions keep search results understandable and the evidence table bounded.

Use these characters in notes, labels, profile text, captions, checklists, ratings mockups, or decorative separators when the receiving system supports Unicode. Consider screen-reader output and context: decorative characters can become noisy when repeated, and a star can carry different meanings in rating, favorite, religious, or navigation contexts.

No account, font download, remote catalog, analytics payload containing the query, or server transformation participates in the result. Reloading clears the local search and copy status. The exact 18-row dataset, source scope, exclusions, and test expectations are recorded with the tool so a future change must pass the same evidence gate before release.

Methodology & sources

Store exactly 18 single-code-point Unicode characters with official names, uppercase U+ labels, and bounded search keywords; assert unique symbols and code points; derive every U+ label from the actual scalar value during tests; filter a normalized query across character, code point, name, and keywords; request Clipboard.writeText only after a direct tile click; report confirmation only after the clipboard promise resolves; and make no server request.

Frequently asked questions

Are these official Unicode character names?
Yes. The displayed names and code points are checked against Unicode names lists and UnicodeData.
Why does a star look different after I paste it?
Fonts and platforms can draw the same Unicode character with different weight, spacing, or emoji presentation.
Does this include every symbol that resembles a star?
No. It is a bounded 18-character collection and excludes pentagrams, mathematical operators, and unrelated asterisks.
Is my search or selection uploaded?
No. Filtering and clipboard interaction run locally in your browser.

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