
About us look, we’ve all been there. You’re typing a math problem in a chat window, or maybe you’re trying to write H₂O in an email, and suddenly you’re stuck. You start hunting through the “Insert Symbol” menu in Word. You search Google for “tiny number 2 copy paste.” You end up on some sketchy website covered in ads that gives you a weird font that breaks when you send it.
It’s a ten-second problem that takes five minutes of annoyance.
That’s exactly why this site exists.
I created Super and Subscript because I needed it myself. I wasn’t trying to build a massive tech company or sell a fancy software subscription. I just wanted two simple buttons: One to make text go up (for exponents like x²y³) and one to make text go down (for chemical formulas or footnotes).
Who Are We? Just a Fellow Internet User.
My name isn’t important (I’m just the person behind the keyboard fixing bugs when Unicode acts weird). What matters is what these tools do—or rather, what they don’t do.
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We don’t track what you type. Your H₂SO₄ formula stays between you and your chemistry professor.
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We don’t use AI to generate fancy fluff. This is just plain old Unicode character mapping.
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We don’t require you to download an app. If you have a browser, you have a superscript generator.
How the Tools Actually Work (Plain English)
Since you’re here for the “About Us,” you probably want to know if this is legit. Here’s the expert but simple explanation:
Computers treat normal letters (A, B, C) and tiny letters (ᴬ, ᴮ, ᶜ) as completely different characters. When you use our Superscript Generator, we instantly swap your normal “2” with the official Unicode superscript “²”. It’s the same character Wikipedia uses. It will paste perfectly into Google Docs, Canva, Instagram bios, or anywhere else without breaking.
The Subscript Generator does the same thing but for the bottom. Need to write CO₂? Type “CO”, hit our subscript tool for the “2”, and paste it. Done.
Our Promise (The EEAT Part)
Google likes to see Experience and Trust. Here’s ours:
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Experience: I’ve spent way too many hours wrestling with character maps just to write a simple exponent. This site is the solution to my own headache.
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Expertise: We don’t guess. We use the official Unicode Standard for mathematical alphanumeric symbols. If a subscript ‘Q’ doesn’t exist in Unicode, we tell you instead of showing you a fake glitchy box.
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Trust: No sign-ups. No credit cards. No dark patterns. Just two free tools that do one job well.
Thanks for stopping by. Now go write that perfect quadratic equation or balance that chemical reaction without pulling your hair out.