Number sign

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Number sign is a name for the symbol #, which is used for a variety of purposes including, in some countries, the designation of a number (for example, "#1" stands for "number one"). The symbol is in Unicode as code point U+0023 #number sign (35decimal, HTML: # ); it is also present in ASCII with the same value.

In the United States, the symbol is usually called the pound sign and the key bearing this symbol on touch-tone phones is called the pound key.[1] In Canada, this key is most frequently called the number sign key. In most other English-speaking countries the symbol is usually called the hash, and the corresponding telephone key is the hash key. Beginning in the 1960s, telephone engineers have attempted to coin a special name for this symbol, with variant spellings including octothorp, octothorpe, octathorp, octotherp, octathorpe, and octatherp;[2] none has become widely accepted.

In many parts of the world, including parts of Europe, Canada, Australia, and Russia, number sign (or equivalents in local languages) refers instead to the numero sign ("№").

The symbol is easily confused with the musical symbol called sharp (). In both symbols, there are two pairs of parallel lines. The key difference is that the number sign has true horizontal strokes while the sharp sign has two slanted parallel lines which must rise from left-to-right, in order to avoid being confused with the musical staff lines. Both signs may have true vertical lines; however, they are compulsory in the sharp sign, but optional in the number sign (#) depending on typeface or handwriting style. Thus, only the number sign may have an italic appearance.

Contents

[edit] Usage and naming conventions in North America

Mainstream use in the US as follows: when it precedes a number, it is read as "number", as in "a #2 pencil" (spoken aloud as: "a number two pencil").

In the United States, the symbol is traditionally called the pound sign or the number sign. The pound name derives from a series of abbreviations for pound, the unit of weight. At first "lb." was used; however, printers later designed a font containing a special symbol of an "lb" with a line through the verticals so that the lowercase letter "l" would not be mistaken for the numeral/digit "1". Unicode character U+2114 () is called the "L B bar symbol", and it is a cursive development of this symbol. Ultimately, the symbol was reduced for clarity as an overlay of two horizontal strokes "=" across two forward-slash-like strokes "//".[1]

In Canada, the symbol is traditionally referred to as the number sign. Major telephone equipment manufacturers, such as Nortel, have an option in their programming to denote Canadian pronunciation, which in turn instructs the system to say "number sign" to callers instead of "pound sign." This same option causes the system to say "zed" instead of the United States' "zee" for the letter Z.[citation needed]

In engineering circles, the pound sign followed by 'per square inch' is used to describe pounds per square inch.[citation needed]

[edit] Usage in the UK and Ireland

In the UK and Ireland, the symbol is most often called the hash. It is never used to refer to pounds weight (lb is commonly used for this). It is never called the "pound sign" since that term is understood to mean the currency symbol "£", for pound sterling or Irish pound.

[edit] Other names in English

The symbol has many other names (and uses) in English.

Comment sign 
Taken from its use in many shell scripts and some programming languages (such as Perl) to start comments.
Cross 
In China, non-native English speakers often refer to the number sign as "cross"
Hash 
A common name for the mark used in the Commonwealth or English-speaking world outside North America. In Ireland, the UK, Australia, India, South Africa, Singapore and New Zealand, "hash key" refers to the # button on touch-tone telephones: "Please press the hash key." Common inside North America when reading computer text out loud when it is used to denote a comment.
Hex 
Common usage in Singapore and Malaysia, as spoken by many recorded telephone directory-assistance menus: 'Please enter your phone number followed by the hex (sic: number sign) key'. The term 'hex' is discouraged in Singapore in favour of 'hash'.[clarification needed]
Octothorp, octothorpe, octathorp, octatherp
Used by Bell Labs engineers by 1968.[3] Lauren Asplund, who provided the article, says that he and a colleague were the source of octothorp at AT&T engineering in New York in 1964. The Merriam-Webster New Book of Word Histories, 1991, has a long article that is consistent with Doug Kerr's essay,[4] in that it says "octotherp" was the original spelling, and that the word arose in the 1960s among telephone engineers. The first appearance of "octothorp" in a US patent is in a 1973 filing which also refers to the asterisk (*) as a "sextile".[5]
Pound 
Used as the symbol for the pound (a unit of weight) in the US. It is never called the pound sign in the UK, where that term always denotes the symbol for pounds sterling (£) rather than that for pounds weight (lb). Keith Gordon Irwin, in The Romance of Writing p. 125, says: "The Italian libbra (from the old Latin word libra, 'balance') represented a weight almost exactly equal to the avoirdupois pound of England. The Italian abbreviation of lb with a line drawn across the letters [℔] was used for both weights. The business clerks' hurried way of writing the abbreviation appears to have been responsible for the # sign used for pound." The pound symbol "#" appears above the numeral 3 on a US-English layout keyboard but on a UK-English keyboard the character above the 3 is the pound sign "£".
Sharp 
Resemblance to the glyph used in music notation, U+266F (♯). So called in the name of the Microsoft programming languages C# and F#. However Microsoft says "It's not the 'hash' (or pound) symbol as most people believe. It's actually supposed to be the musical sharp symbol. However, because the sharp symbol is not present on the standard keyboard, it's easier to type the hash ('#') symbol. The name of the language is, of course, pronounced 'see sharp'."[6] According to the ECMA-334 C# Language Specification, section 6, Acronyms and abbreviations, the name of the language is written "C#" ("LATIN CAPITAL LETTER C (U+0043) followed by the NUMBER SIGN # (U+0023)") and pronounced "C Sharp".[7]
Space 
Used by editors to denote where space should be inserted in a proof. This can mean
  1. a line space (the space between two adjacent lines denoted by line # in the margin),
  2. a hair space (the space between two letters in a word, denoted by hr #)
  3. a word space, or letter space (the space between two words on a line, two letter spaces being ##)
Em- and en-spaces (being the length of a letter m and n, respectively) are denoted by a square-shaped em- or en-quad character ( and , respectively).[citation needed]
Square 
Occasionally used in the UK (e.g. sometimes in BT publications and automatic messages) – especially during the Prestel era, when the symbol was a page address delimiter. The International Telecommunications Union specification ITU-T E.161 3.2.2 states: "The # is to be known as a 'square' or the most commonly used equivalent term in other languages."
Crunch 
It is used as "crunch" in the Linux distribution #! "Crunch Bang" (http://crunchbanglinux.org/)
Others... 
Even more include "crosshatch, pound, pound sign, number, number sign, sharp, octothorpe#, hash, (garden) fence, crunch, mesh, hex, flash, grid, pig-pen, tictactoe, scratch (mark), (garden) gate, hak, oof, rake, sink&, corridor&, unequal#, punch mark" (http://ss64.com/bash/syntax-pronounce.html)

[edit] In mathematics

[edit] Computing

[edit] Other uses

[edit] On the keyboard

On standard US keyboard layouts, the # symbol is Shift+3. On standard UK and European keyboards, the same keystrokes produce the pound currency symbol (£), and # is moved to a separate key above the right shift. On UK Mac keyboards, # is generated by Option+3, whereas on European Mac keyboards, the # can be found above the right shift key. Under DOS and Microsoft Windows, it can be also generated through the Alt code Alt-35.

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b William Safire. "On Language; Hit the Pound Sign". New York Times. http://www.nytimes.com/1991/03/24/magazine/on-language-hit-the-pound-sign.html. Retrieved 2011-05-21. 
  2. ^ Octothorpe on Dictonary.com (which has its own sources cited)
  3. ^ Hochhester, Sheldon (2006-09-29). "Pressing Matters: Touch-tone phones spark debate". Encore. http://www.svpal.org/~dickel/octothorp/Encore_magazine.pdf. 
  4. ^ Douglas A. Kerr (2006-05-07) (PDF). The ASCII Character "Octatherp". http://dougkerr.net/pumpkin/articles/Octatherp.pdf. 
  5. ^ U.S. Patent No. 3,920,296, Google Patent Search
  6. ^ Frequently Asked Questions about C#
  7. ^ Ecma-international.com
  8. ^ "Introduction to HTML", W3C Recommendation
  9. ^ Lispworks.com
  10. ^ Oracle.com
  11. ^ Glossary of Medical Devices and Procedures: Abbreviations, Acronyms, and Definitions
  12. ^ Carnie, Andrew (2006). Syntax: A Generative Introduction (2nd ed.). Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell. ISBN 1405133848. 
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