How to Type a Not Equal Sign

The not equal sign (≠) indicates inequality between two values. Essential for mathematics, programming, and logic expressions when values are different.

Quick Reference

Windows

Hold Alt and type 8800 on the numeric keypad (requires Unicode-aware applications).

Alt + 8800

Mac

Press Option + =.

Option + =

Linux

Press Ctrl + Shift + U, type 2260, press Enter.

Ctrl + Shift + U, 2260, Enter

HTML

Use the HTML entity ≠ or numeric ≠.

≠ or ≠

Common Uses

The not equal sign is used across mathematics, programming, and logic to express that two values are different or not equivalent.

  • Mathematics: x ≠ 0 (x is not equal to zero)
  • Programming (visual): Representing != in documentation
  • Logic: A ≠ B (A and B are not the same)
  • Algebra: 2 + 2 ≠ 5 (false statement)
  • Set theory: S₁ ≠ S₂ (sets are different)

Programming Equivalents

In programming, the not equal operator varies by language:

  • Most languages: != (C, Java, JavaScript, Python, etc.)
  • SQL: <> or !=
  • Pascal: <>
  • BASIC: <>
  • R: !=

The ≠ symbol is typically used in documentation and mathematical notation, while != is used in actual code.

Related Inequality Symbols

Not equal to

< Less than

> Greater than

Less than or equal to (U+2264)

Greater than or equal to (U+2265)

Approximately equal to (U+2248)

Technical Details

Unicode: U+2260

HTML Entity: &ne;

HTML Decimal: &#8800;

Alt Code (Windows): Alt + 8800

Name: NOT EQUAL TO

Related Symbols

± Plus-Minus ÷ Division View All →