Variant pi or "pomega" ( or ϖ) is a glyph variant of lowercase pi sometimes used in technical contexts. It resembles a lowercase omega with a macron, though historically it is simply a cursive form of pi, with its legs bent inward to meet. It was also used in the minuscule script. It is a symbol for:
Lower-case pi was fairly common in 8-bit character encodings, for instance it is at 0xE3 in CP437 and at 0xB9 on Mac OS Roman.
The various forms of pi present in Unicode are:
U+03A0ΠGREEK CAPITAL LETTER PI (Π)
U+03C0πGREEK SMALL LETTER PI (π)
U+03D6ϖGREEK PI SYMBOL (ϖ, ϖ)
U+1D28ᴨGREEK LETTER SMALL CAPITAL PI
U+213FℿDOUBLE-STRUCK CAPITAL PI
U+213CℼDOUBLE-STRUCK SMALL PI
U+220F∏N-ARY PRODUCT (∏, ∏)
U+2210∐N-ARY COPRODUCT (∐, ∐)
U+2CA0ⲠCOPTIC CAPITAL LETTER PI
U+2CA1ⲡCOPTIC SMALL LETTER PI
These are intended for use as mathematical symbols. Text written in the Greek language (i.e. words, as opposed to mathematics) should not come from any of the tables on this page, but instead should use the normal Greek letters, which have different code numbers and often a different appearance. Using the mathematical symbols to display words (or vice versa) is likely to result in inconsistent spacing and a clumsy, mismatched appearance:
^Faulmann, Karl (2000). Schriftzeichen und Alphabete aller Zeiten und Völker (in German) (Repr. nach d. Wiener Ausg. 1880, Neuausg ed.). München: Augustus. ISBN978-3-8043-0374-4.
^"Pomega". Eric Weisstein's World of Physics. wolfram.com.
^Kobayashi, Hiroyuki; Takeuchi, Shingo (2019). "Applications of generalized trigonometric functions with two parameters". Communications on Pure & Applied Analysis. 18 (3): 1509. arXiv:1903.07407. doi:10.3934/cpaa.2019072. S2CID102487670.