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Special characters: Difference between revisions

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m I replaced the {{vague}} that I put there with a {{clarify}}; it describes it better.
I notified two unclear characters.
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#! - [[Shebang (Unix)|"sh'bang" (hash/bang)]]
#! - [[Shebang (Unix)|"sh'bang" (hash/bang)]]
/* - "slashterix"{{cite-needed|this character seems unusual; it is two characters, and "asterix" as supposed in there, is actually asterisk; that is also unusual.}}
/* - "slashterix"
*/ - "asterslash"
*/ - "asterslash"{{cite-needed|§same reason.}}
&amp;amp; - "amper-amp" - the HTML and XML encoding for the ampersand character<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/guidelines.html#C_12|title=HTML Compatibility Guidelines|work=World Wide Web Consortium}}</ref>
&amp;amp; - "amper-amp" - the HTML and XML encoding for the ampersand character<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/guidelines.html#C_12|title=HTML Compatibility Guidelines|work=World Wide Web Consortium}}</ref>



Revision as of 20:01, 22 December 2012

Special characters have been given pronunciations similar to letters and numbers in a radio alphabet. The most common pronunciations originated with users of Unix systems. Each of the ASCII printable characters has multiple names — some formal, some concise, some silly (Intercal is responsible for some of this).[clarification needed][1]

ASCII special characters

The following is a fairly complete list:[citation needed]

ASCII CODE

21 ! - "bang", "shriek" - exclamation point
22 " - "quote"
23 # - "hash" - distinct from "pound" which is the British currency symbol, "sharp", "octothorpe"
24 $ - "bling", "ding" (cash register sound), "cash", "buck", "dollar"
25 % - "percent", "percent sign"
26 & - "amper" - distinct from "amp" in "&amp;" (see below) and the word "and"
27 ' - "tick"
28 ( - "paren", "open"
29 ) - "paren", "close"
2A * - "splat", "star"
2B + - "plus"
2C , - "twitch"
2D - - "dash","minus","tack"
2E . - "dot", "period"
2F / - "slash", "forward slash"
3A : - "two dots", "colon"
3B ; - "semi", "semicolon"
3C < - "waka", "less"
3D = - "equals"
3E > - "waka", "more"
3F ? - "hook", "query", "eh?" - question mark
40 @ - "whirl", "monkey", "at"
5B [ - "square", "left"
5C \ - "whack", "back slash"
5D ] - "square", "right"
5E ^ - "hat", "caret"
5F _ - "skid", "underbar", "underscore"
60 ` - "grave"
7B { - "curly", "embrace"
7C | - "bar", "pipe"
7D } - "curly", "unbrace"
7E ~ - "twiddle", "tilde"
B4 ´ - "acute"

#! - "sh'bang" (hash/bang)
/* - "slashterix"[citation needed]
*/ - "asterslash"[citation needed]
&amp; - "amper-amp" - the HTML and XML encoding for the ampersand character[2]

References

  1. ^ "The Jargon File": "ASCII" edited by Eric S. Raymond
  2. ^ "HTML Compatibility Guidelines". World Wide Web Consortium.