Dash
Punctuation marks used to separate parts of a sentence or indicate ranges. Unicode defines multiple dashes: hyphen (‐), en dash (–), em dash (—), figure dash (‒), and more.
What is a Dash?
In typography, dash refers to a family of horizontal line characters that perform distinct semantic roles. The word "dash" is often used loosely, but each member of the dash family has a specific purpose: the hyphen joins words, the en dash marks ranges, the em dash marks interruptions or parenthetical asides, and the minus sign is a mathematical operator. Confusing them is one of the most common typographic errors in digital publishing.
The Dash Family
| Character | Unicode | Name | Width | Primary Use |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| - | U+002D | Hyphen-minus | Narrow | Keyboard input, compound words, programming |
| ‐ | U+2010 | Hyphen | Same as - | True hyphen for breaking words |
| ‑ | U+2011 | Non-breaking Hyphen | Same | Hyphen that prevents line breaks |
| – | U+2013 | En Dash | 1 en (~½ em) | Ranges, scores, compound proper nouns |
| — | U+2014 | Em Dash | 1 em | Parenthetical aside, interruption |
| ― | U+2015 | Horizontal Bar | ~1 em | Dialogue attribution (in some typographic traditions) |
| − | U+2212 | Minus Sign | Math-width | Mathematical subtraction |
The Hyphen-Minus Problem
The hyphen-minus (U+002D, the - on your keyboard) is a compromise character that computers inherited from typewriter culture. It serves as hyphen, minus sign, and even dash in informal writing — but typographically it should only be used as a hyphen for word breaks or in code/programming contexts.
Smart text editors and word processors auto-convert -- to an en dash and --- to an em dash. HTML entities provide the correct characters:
– <!-- en dash – -->
— <!-- em dash — -->
− <!-- minus sign − -->
En Dash Usage (–)
The en dash (U+2013) is used for: - Ranges: pages 10–25, the 2020–2024 period, Monday–Friday - Scores: the final score was 3–2 - Compound modifiers with proper nouns: the New York–London flight
Keyboard entry:
- macOS: Option + Hyphen
- Windows: Alt + 0150 (numpad)
- HTML: – or –
Em Dash Usage (—)
The em dash (U+2014) is the most versatile dash, used for: - Parenthetical aside: She finally arrived—three hours late—with no explanation. - Interruption: "I can't believe you would—" she stopped herself. - Emphasis: Only one thing mattered now—survival.
Em dashes may appear with or without spaces depending on house style (American style: no spaces; British style: spaced).
Keyboard entry:
- macOS: Shift + Option + Hyphen
- Windows: Alt + 0151 (numpad)
- HTML: — or —
Quick Facts
| Property | Value |
|---|---|
| Keyboard hyphen-minus | U+002D — the - key |
| En dash | U+2013, width of letter "n", for ranges |
| Em dash | U+2014, width of letter "m", for parentheticals |
| Minus sign | U+2212, mathematical subtraction |
| macOS en dash shortcut | Option + - |
| macOS em dash shortcut | Shift + Option + - |
| HTML en dash entity | – |
| HTML em dash entity | — |
Related Terms
More in Typography
A character that attaches to the preceding base character to modify it. …
CSS @font-face descriptor specifying which Unicode code points a font should cover. …
A mark added to a letter to change pronunciation or meaning. Can …
U+2026 HORIZONTAL ELLIPSIS (…). A single character replacing three periods, typographically correct …
Em: a width equal to the font size. En: half an em. …
A specific implementation of a typeface at a particular size, weight, and …
The mechanism by which a rendering engine substitutes glyphs from a secondary …
The visual representation of a character as rendered by a font. One …
Adjusting the spacing between specific character pairs for visual harmony (e.g., AV, …
Two or more characters joined into a single glyph. Can be typographic …