Allow me to just point out the option of continuing to use ">>" for this purpose. There's nothing inherently wrong with it, although it might need extra care to prevent line-breaking between the two, in some software. (This isn't an issue in the couple of programs I just tested)
On Saturday, 19 July 2025 at 13:56, Ivan Panchenko via Unicode <[email protected]> wrote: > People sometimes use two greater-than signs or a right-hand guillemet > to point to the right, e.g., in “Continue reading >>” or preceding a > text as part of a link. I wonder which Unicode character(s) would be > appropriate for this. There is U+02C3 (“˃”, modifier letter right > arrowhead), but it is a modifier letter (see also U+08FC (arabic > double right arrowhead above with dot) for comparison). Simply U+27A4 > (“➤”, black rightwards arrowhead), whose contour consists of two > > -like shapes? Or should a new character be proposed?
