,
U+002C

COMMA

Po — Other Punctuation
Common
Basic Multilingual Plane (BMP)
44

Encoding Table

This table shows the exact bytes used to represent COMMA in each encoding. Unicode encodings (UTF-8, UTF-16, UTF-32) support every character; legacy encodings only cover a limited character set and show "not supported" when a character falls outside their range.

Encoding Bytes (Hex) Bytes (Decimal) Byte count
UTF-8 2C 44 1
UTF-16 LE 2C 00 44 0 2
UTF-16 BE 00 2C 0 44 2
UTF-32 LE 2C 00 00 00 44 0 0 0 4
UTF-32 BE 00 00 00 2C 0 0 0 44 4
ASCII 2C 44 1
Latin-1 (ISO-8859-1) 2C 44 1
Windows-1252 2C 44 1
ISO-8859-2 (Latin-2) 2C 44 1
ISO-8859-5 (Cyrillic) 2C 44 1
KOI8-R 2C 44 1
Shift-JIS 2C 44 1
EUC-JP 2C 44 1
GBK 2C 44 1
Big5 2C 44 1

Escape Sequences

How to reference this character in source code, markup, and URLs.

none
,
,
\2C
\u002C
%2C
\u002c
44

View the glyph in different fonts and scripts on our sibling site.

View U+002C on CharLookup.com ↗

UTF-8 Binary Breakdown

UTF-8 encodes this character as 1 byte. Single-byte characters (U+0000–U+007F) are identical to ASCII — the high bit is always 0.

Byte 1
0 0 1 0 1 1 0 0
2C
UTF-8: 2C · 1 byte · Codepoint U+002C

Unicode Properties

Introduced in Unicode 1.1
CS — Common Separator

Nearby Characters in Basic Latin