Symbol pronunciation (Re: awk comments)
Hans Mulder
hansm at cs.kun.nl
Thu May 2 08:22:54 AEST 1991
In <1991Apr30.085700.10664 at grep.co.uk> vic at grep.co.uk (Victor Gavin) writes:
>This hasn't been mentioned for a while so thought I'd resurrect it.
>The # has several ``names''. Octothorpe, pound, mesh, hash are just a few.
>Octothorpe was invented by AT&T so we can ignore that.
By extension '=' may be called "quadrathorpe" and '-' is a "bithorpe".
Monothorpes are also theoretically possible, but so far none have been
observed in the comp.sci lab :-).
>Pound is an Americanism, which doesn't exist anywhere else. For
>example in the UK, if you mentioned a pound sign, people would expect
>that you meant the UK currency symbol (a fancy L with a dash through
>it).
Actually, in the British variant of ASCII the symbol in position 043
looks just like that. They pronounce it "pound", obviously.
Shell scripts, C source etc. looks rather funny on such equipment,
except to Brits. They're used to it.
>Mesh is a silly invention, used in the same vein as rabbit ears for
>double quotes (").
That vein is called INTERCAL.
>The only name for # that most everyone understands is hash -- or then
>again maybe it depends on how you were brought up :-)
Now there's an Americanism.
The most widely recognised name is "sharp" (from music).
Second is "number sign", although that is also an Amercanism.
>The naming of symbols is probably a religious issue (like the
>pronunciation of char: is it the base of the word `character' or
>is it like the word char, as in lightly burn a something).
Agreed.
> vic
>--
Hans Mulder hansm at cs.kun.nl
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