The letter O with a slash through it — written as Ø or ø — is a distinct letter in the Danish, Norwegian, and Faroese alphabets. It also appears in the International Phonetic Alphabet, mathematics, and engineering notation. Whether you need it for Scandinavian language writing, phonetic transcription, set theory, or technical documentation, this guide covers every way to type Ø and ø on any device and platform.
What Is the O With a Slash?
The slashed O Ø ø is not simply a letter O with a decoration — it is an entirely separate letter in several languages with its own name, sound, and place in the alphabet. In Danish and Norwegian it is the last letter of the alphabet, sitting after Z. In Faroese it appears in the same position.
Beyond language, the symbol appears in several other contexts with completely different meanings:
| Context | Symbol | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| Danish / Norwegian / Faroese | Ø / ø | A distinct vowel letter (sounds like “uh” or “er”) |
| Swedish | Ö / ö | Equivalent sound, different character |
| German | Ö / ö | Umlaut — related but distinct character |
| Mathematics / Set Theory | ∅ | Empty set — a completely different symbol |
| Engineering / Technical | Ø | Diameter symbol |
| International Phonetic Alphabet | ø | Close-mid front rounded vowel |
| Music | ø | Half-diminished chord symbol |
Critical distinction: The letter Ø (U+00D8) used in Danish and Norwegian is completely different from the empty set symbol ∅ (U+2205) used in mathematics, despite looking similar. They have different Unicode code points, different meanings, and are not interchangeable. This guide covers the letter Ø — see the section on related symbols for the empty set.
The full Unicode details for the letter:
| Symbol | Name | Unicode |
|---|---|---|
| Ø | Latin capital letter O with stroke | U+00D8 |
| ø | Latin small letter o with stroke | U+00F8 |
How to Type O With Slash on Windows
Method 1: Alt Code (Fastest on Windows)
Make sure Num Lock is on, hold Alt, type the code on the numeric keypad, then release Alt:
- Alt + 0248 → ø (lowercase)
- Alt + 0216 → Ø (uppercase)
These are among the more commonly needed Alt codes for Scandinavian language writing and are worth memorizing if you type Danish or Norwegian regularly.
Some sources list Alt + 155 for ø and Alt + 157 for Ø using the older OEM code page. The four-digit versions with leading zeros (0248 and 0216) are more universally reliable across all Windows applications.
Method 2: Unicode Input (Microsoft Word)
- Type the Unicode code point:
- 00F8 for ø
- 00D8 for Ø
- Immediately press Alt + X
- Word converts it instantly to the slashed O
Method 3: Copy and Paste
Copy directly from this page and paste anywhere: ø Ø
Works in every browser, app, text field, and document editor with no setup required.
Method 4: Character Map
- Open Start and search “Character Map”
- Search for “o with stroke” or “slashed o”
- Select ø or Ø
- Click Select, then Copy
- Paste into your document
Method 5: Windows Emoji Panel
- Press Windows key + . (period)
- Go to the Symbols tab
- Search for “o stroke” or “o slash”
- Click to insert if the character appears in results
Method 6: Add a Scandinavian Keyboard Layout
For regular Danish or Norwegian writing, adding the appropriate keyboard layout is the most natural long-term solution:
- Go to Settings > Time & Language > Language & Region
- Click Add a language
- Choose Danish, Norwegian Bokmål, or Norwegian Nynorsk
- Switch layouts using Windows key + Space
- On a Danish or Norwegian keyboard layout, ø has its own dedicated key — sitting to the right of the L key on the home row, in the same position as the semicolon on a US keyboard
How to Type O With Slash on Mac
Method 1: Press and Hold (Easiest)
On macOS, press and hold the O key and a popup appears with accent and variant options. However, the standard press-and-hold popup on a US keyboard layout does not include ø by default — it shows ó ò ô ö õ ō but not ø.
To get ø through press and hold, you need to have a Danish or Norwegian keyboard added to your input sources.
Method 2: Option Key Shortcut (Best Mac Method)
Mac has a direct built-in shortcut for the slashed O:
Option + O → ø (lowercase) Option + Shift + O → Ø (uppercase)
This is one of the cleanest Option key shortcuts on Mac — a single keypress with no dead-key sequence required. It works in every app on macOS with no configuration needed.
Method 3: Character Viewer
- Press Control + Command + Space
- Search for “o with stroke” or “slashed o”
- Double-click ø or Ø to insert
Method 4: Unicode Hex Input
- Enable Unicode Hex Input under System Settings > Keyboard > Input Sources
- Hold Option and type the Unicode code point:
- 00F8 → ø
- 00D8 → Ø
Method 5: Add a Scandinavian Keyboard on Mac
- Go to System Settings > Keyboard > Input Sources
- Click + and search for Danish or Norwegian
- Add the keyboard
- Switch using the input menu in the menu bar
- On the Danish or Norwegian layout, ø has its own key to the right of L
How to Type O With Slash on iPhone and iPad
Method 1: Press and Hold (Built-In — Easiest)
iOS supports accent popups natively — and unlike Mac, the iPhone keyboard does include ø in the press-and-hold popup for O:
- Press and hold the O key
- A popup row appears showing: ò ó ô õ ö ø ō
- Slide to ø and release
For uppercase Ø:
- Tap Shift to enable caps
- Press and hold O
- The popup shows Ø among the options
- Slide to Ø and release
This is the standard method for iPhone users — no setup required.
Method 2: Add a Scandinavian Keyboard
For frequent Danish or Norwegian writing:
- Go to Settings > General > Keyboard > Keyboards
- Tap Add New Keyboard
- Select Danish or Norwegian Bokmål
- While typing, tap the globe icon to switch to the Scandinavian keyboard
- The ø key appears to the right of the L key
Method 3: Text Replacement Shortcut
For even faster access without hunting through the popup:
- Go to Settings > General > Keyboard > Text Replacement
- Tap +
- In Phrase, paste ø
- In Shortcut, type something like
oslashoroe - Tap Save
How to Type O With Slash on Android
Method 1: Press and Hold (Built-In — Easiest)
Like iOS, most Android keyboards including Gboard support long-press popups for accented characters:
- Press and hold the O key
- A row of variants appears — look for ø in the popup
- Slide to ø and release
Note: Not all Android keyboards include ø in the O press-and-hold popup. If it does not appear, use one of the methods below.
Method 2: Add Danish or Norwegian to Gboard
- Open Gboard
- Tap the globe icon or go to Gboard Settings > Languages
- Tap Add Keyboard
- Select Danish or Norwegian
- Tap Done
- Switch to the Scandinavian keyboard using the globe icon while typing
- The ø key will appear on the keyboard as a dedicated character
Method 3: Personal Dictionary Shortcut
For a quick shortcut without switching keyboards:
- Go to Gboard Settings > Dictionary > Personal Dictionary
- Select your language
- Tap +
- Add ø as the word and
oslashas the shortcut - Tap the checkmark to save
How to Type O With Slash in Microsoft Word
Method 1: Alt + X (Fastest in Word)
Type 00F8 then press Alt + X — Word instantly converts it to ø. For uppercase: type 00D8 then Alt + X → Ø
Method 2: Built-In Word Shortcut
Word has a dedicated shortcut for the slashed O:
Ctrl + / then O → ø (lowercase) Ctrl + / then Shift + O → Ø (uppercase)
This is the cleanest method in Word. Press Ctrl + /, release both keys, then immediately press O. The two-step sequence produces the slashed O without needing to remember Unicode values.
Method 3: AutoCorrect Setup
Set Word to automatically replace a key sequence with ø:
- Go to File > Options > Proofing > AutoCorrect Options
- In Replace, type something like
(oslash)oroe - In With, paste ø
- Add a second rule: Replace
(Oslash)With Ø - Click Add, then OK
Method 4: Insert > Symbol
- Go to Insert > Symbol > More Symbols
- Set Subset to Latin-1 Supplement
- Find ø or Ø
- Click Insert
How to Type O With Slash in Google Docs
Method 1: Insert > Special Characters
- Go to Insert > Special Characters
- Search for “o with stroke” or “slashed o”
- Click ø or Ø to insert
Method 2: Copy and Paste
Copy ø or Ø from this article and paste directly into your Google Doc — no additional steps needed.
Method 3: Substitutions
- Go to Tools > Preferences > Substitutions
- In Replace, type
oeor(oslash) - In With, paste ø
- Add a second rule for Ø
- Click OK
O With Slash in HTML and CSS
For web developers and publishers, here are all the correct ways to render the slashed O in code:
Lowercase ø
| Method | Code | Result |
|---|---|---|
| HTML named entity | ø | ø |
| HTML numeric (hex) | ø | ø |
| HTML numeric (decimal) | ø | ø |
| CSS content property | content: "\00F8"; | ø |
| Direct UTF-8 | paste ø directly | ø |
Uppercase Ø
| Method | Code | Result |
|---|---|---|
| HTML named entity | Ø | Ø |
| HTML numeric (hex) | Ø | Ø |
| HTML numeric (decimal) | Ø | Ø |
| CSS content property | content: "\00D8"; | Ø |
| Direct UTF-8 | paste Ø directly | Ø |
Best practice:
øandØare original HTML named entities with universal browser support dating back to HTML 2.0. Use them freely in markup. For CSS, use the Unicode escape. If your file is UTF-8 encoded (always include<meta charset="UTF-8">in<head>), you can also paste ø and Ø directly into your HTML.
Ø in Different Languages and Fields
Danish and Norwegian
In Danish and Norwegian, ø is a full independent letter — the last letter of the alphabet after Z. It represents a front rounded vowel sound, similar to the German ö or the French eu.
Common Danish and Norwegian words using ø:
- øl — beer
- ø — island
- grøn — green
- størrelse — size
- København — Copenhagen
- Bjørn — a common name (means “bear”)
- økonomi — economy
In both languages, ø and o are completely different letters — substituting one for the other produces either a misspelling or a different word entirely.
Faroese
Faroese, spoken in the Faroe Islands, uses ø in the same way as Danish and Norwegian. The Faroe Islands themselves take their name from Faroese Føroyar — which contains the ø.
Swedish
Swedish uses ö rather than ø for the equivalent sound. While ø and ö represent very similar vowel sounds across the Scandinavian languages, they are typographically distinct — ø has a diagonal stroke while ö has two dots (umlaut). Do not substitute one for the other in Swedish text.
International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA)
In the IPA, ø represents the close-mid front rounded vowel — the sound in French bleu (blue) or German schön (beautiful). Linguists, language teachers, and phonetics resources use it in transcriptions regardless of the language being described.
Engineering and Technical Drawing
The Ø symbol is widely used in engineering, architecture, and technical drawing to indicate diameter. When you see Ø12mm on a technical drawing, it means the diameter of the circle or hole is 12 millimeters. This usage is so common in technical fields that Ø is sometimes read aloud as “diameter” rather than “oh stroke.”
Mathematics
This is where the most important distinction lies. The empty set symbol ∅ (U+2205) looks very similar to Ø but is a completely different Unicode character used exclusively in mathematics and set theory to denote the set containing no elements. Using the letter Ø instead of ∅ in mathematical notation is technically incorrect, though the visual similarity means it is often accepted informally.
Ø vs. ∅ vs. Ö vs. 0: Know the Difference
This symbol is frequently confused with several visually similar characters:
| Symbol | Unicode | Name | Use |
|---|---|---|---|
| ø | U+00F8 | Latin small letter o with stroke | Danish/Norwegian letter, IPA, diameter |
| Ø | U+00D8 | Latin capital letter O with stroke | Uppercase version of above |
| ∅ | U+2205 | Empty set | Mathematics — set with no elements |
| ö | U+00F6 | Latin small letter o with diaeresis | Swedish, German, Finnish umlaut |
| Ö | U+00D6 | Latin capital letter O with diaeresis | Uppercase umlaut |
| 0 | U+0030 | Digit zero | The number zero |
| O | U+004F | Latin capital letter O | Regular letter O |
Getting these right matters — particularly the ø vs. ∅ distinction in academic writing, and the ø vs. ö distinction when writing in Scandinavian versus German.
Related Scandinavian and Nordic Characters
If you are writing in Danish, Norwegian, or another Nordic language, these related characters are worth having in your toolkit alongside ø:
| Symbol | Name | Unicode | Mac Shortcut | Windows Alt Code | HTML Entity |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ø | O with stroke (lower) | U+00F8 | Option + O | Alt + 0248 | ø |
| Ø | O with stroke (upper) | U+00D8 | Option + Shift + O | Alt + 0216 | Ø |
| æ | AE ligature (lower) | U+00E6 | Option + ‘ | Alt + 0230 | æ |
| Æ | AE ligature (upper) | U+00C6 | Option + Shift + ‘ | Alt + 0198 | Æ |
| å | A with ring (lower) | U+00E5 | Option + A | Alt + 0229 | å |
| Å | A with ring (upper) | U+00C5 | Option + Shift + A | Alt + 0197 | Å |
| ö | O with umlaut (lower) | U+00F6 | Option + U then O | Alt + 0246 | ö |
| Ö | O with umlaut (upper) | U+00D6 | Option + U then Shift+O | Alt + 0214 | Ö |
Quick Reference: O With Slash Cheat Sheet
| ø | Ø | |
|---|---|---|
| Name | Latin small letter o with stroke | Latin capital letter O with stroke |
| Unicode | U+00F8 | U+00D8 |
| HTML entity | ø | Ø |
| HTML numeric | ø | Ø |
| Windows Alt code | Alt + 0248 | Alt + 0216 |
| Word shortcut | Ctrl + / then O | Ctrl + / then Shift+O |
| Word (Alt+X) | Type 00F8 + Alt+X | Type 00D8 + Alt+X |
| Mac shortcut | Option + O | Option + Shift + O |
| Mac (Viewer) | Ctrl+Cmd+Space, search “o stroke” | ← same |
| iPhone / Android | Hold O, slide to ø | Hold Shift+O, slide to Ø |
| Scandinavian keyboard | Dedicated key (right of L) | Shift + dedicated key |
| CSS escape | \00F8 | \00D8 |
Final Thoughts
The O with a slash — ø and Ø — is one of those characters that looks exotic on a US keyboard but is completely straightforward once you know where to find it. Mac users have the easiest path with Option + O working instantly in every app. iPhone users can access it by pressing and holding O — it is right there in the popup without any setup. Windows users should commit Alt + 0248 to memory for ø, or use the Ctrl + / then O shortcut inside Word. For anyone writing regularly in Danish or Norwegian, adding the Scandinavian keyboard layout gives ø its own dedicated key — exactly where it belongs — and makes the whole experience feel natural. Developers building Nordic-language content should use ø — one of the original named HTML entities with support in every browser ever made.
Meet Ry, “TechGuru,” a 36-year-old technology enthusiast with a deep passion for tech innovations. With extensive experience, he specializes in gaming hardware and software, and has expertise in gadgets, custom PCs, and audio.
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