Exponent Generator

Copy and Paste Exponent Text for Math, Formulas, and Stylish Writing


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What is Exponent Text?

Exponent text is a small raised number or letter that appears above the normal writing line, like x², 10³, or aⁿ. It’s used to show powers in math, scientific notation, and short technical writing. A related style is subscript text, which appears below the line, like H₂O, CO₂, or x₁. Both superscript and subscript are commonly used in math, chemistry, physics, footnotes, and clean “mini text” styling for captions.

This Exponent Generator creates superscript and subscript using Unicode characters, which means you can copy and paste the results into many apps without special formatting tools. It’s helpful when you’re typing in a place that doesn’t support equation editors (like a social post, comment, chat message, or profile bio). Keep in mind: Unicode doesn’t include superscript versions for every symbol, so some characters may stay normal or use the closest available option.

How to Generate Exponent Text and Copy Paste

  • Type your text (like x2, 10^3, H2O, or CO2) in the box above.
  • Find the superscript (exponent) or subscript output you need.
  • Copy the converted result.
  • Paste it into your notes, homework, chat, post, caption, or bio.
  • Preview after pasting to confirm spacing looks right.
  • If a character doesn’t convert, simplify the text or use a different representation.

FAQs

How do I type x²?

Type x2 in the input box, then copy the superscript output that shows .

How do I write 10³ or 10⁶?

Type 103 or 10 3 (depending on the style shown), then copy the superscript version like 10³. Repeat for other powers.

Can I make chemical formulas like H₂O and CO₂?

Yes. Use the subscript output to get H₂O, CO₂, and similar formulas.

Is this the same as using an equation editor?

No. Equation editors use formatting. This tool outputs Unicode characters so the exponent stays when you copy and paste.

Why don’t all characters turn into superscript?

Unicode support is limited. Many letters and symbols don’t have a true superscript version, so they may remain normal.

Will exponent text work on Instagram and WhatsApp?

Often yes, but results depend on the app. Paste it once to confirm it displays correctly for your audience.

Can I use exponent text for footnotes?

Yes. Superscript numbers work nicely for footnotes in simple documents, notes, and posts where full formatting isn’t available.