Dotted zero The zero with a
dot in the center seems to have originated as an option on
IBM 3270 display controllers. The dotted zero may appear similar to the
Greek letter theta (particularly capital theta, Θ), but the two have different
glyphs. In
raster fonts, the theta usually has a horizontal line connecting, or nearly touching, the sides of an O, while the dotted zero simply has a dot in the middle. However, on a low-definition display, such a form can be confused with a numeral 8. In some fonts the IPA letter for a
bilabial click (ʘ) looks similar to the dotted zero. Alternatively, the dot can become a vertical trace—for example, by adding a "combining short vertical line overlay" (U+20D3). It may be coded as 0⃓ giving 0⃓. The dotted zero has been used on the
vehicle registration plates of Slovakia since 2023.
Slashed letter 'O' video display terminal with a slashed O
IBM (and a few other early mainframe makers) used a convention in which the letter O had a slash and the digit 0 did not. This is even more problematic for
Danes,
Faroese, and
Norwegians because it means two of their letters — the O and slashed O (
Ø) — are visually similar. This was later flipped and most mainframe chain or band printers used the opposite convention (letter O printed as is, and digit zero printed with a slash). This was the de facto standard from 1970s to 1990s. However current use of network laser printers that use PC style fonts caused the demise of the slashed zero in most companies — only a few configured laser printers to use it.
Reversed slash Some
Burroughs/
Unisys equipment displays a zero with a reversed slash, similar to the
no symbol, , as does the free typeface
Atkinson Hyperlegible. ==See also==