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Colon (punctuation)

The colon, :, is a punctuation mark consisting of two equally sized dots aligned vertically. A colon often precedes an explanation, a list,[1] or a quoted sentence.[2] It is also used between hours and minutes in time,[1] between certain elements in medical journal citations,[3] between chapter and verse in Bible citations,[4] and, in the US, for salutations in business letters and other formal letter writing.[1]

:
Colon
U+003A : COLON (:)

History

In Ancient Greek, in rhetoric and prosody, the term κῶλον (kôlon, lit. 'limb, member of a body') did not refer to punctuation, but to a member or section of a complete thought or passage; see also Colon (rhetoric). From this usage, in palaeography, a colon is a clause or group of clauses written as a line in a manuscript.[5]

In the 3rd century BC, Aristophanes of Byzantium is alleged to have devised a punctuation system, in which the end of such a kôlon was thought to occasion a medium-length breath, and was marked by a middot ·. In practice, we don't have much evidence for its early usage, but it was revived later as the ano teleia, the modern Greek semicolon.[6] Some writers also used a double dot symbol , that later came to be used as a full stop or to mark a change of speaker. (See also Punctuation in Ancient Greek.)

In 1589, in The Arte of English Poesie, the English term colon and the corresponding punctuation mark : is attested:[7][a]

For these respectes the auncient reformers of language, inuented, three maner of pauses [...] The shortest pause or intermission they called comma [...] The second they called colon, not a peece but as it were a member for his larger length, because it occupied twise as much time as the comma. The third they called periodus, [...]

In 1622, in Nicholas Okes' print of William Shakespeare's Othello, the typographical construction of a colon followed by a hyphen or dash to indicate a restful pause is attested.[8] This construction, known as the dog's bollocks, was once common in British English; though this usage is now discouraged.[9][10][11]

As late as the 18th century, John Mason related the appropriateness of a colon to the length of the pause taken when reading the text aloud, but silent reading eventually replaced this with other considerations.[12]

Usage in English

In modern English usage, a complete sentence precedes a colon, while a list, description, explanation, or definition follows it. The elements which follow the colon may or may not be a complete sentence: since the colon is preceded by a sentence, it is a complete sentence whether what follows the colon is another sentence or not. While it is acceptable to capitalise the first letter after the colon in American English, it is not the case in British English, except where a proper noun immediately follows a colon.[13]

Colon used before list
Daequan was so hungry that he ate everything in the house: chips, cold pizza, pretzels and dip, hot dogs, peanut butter, and candy.
Colon used before a description
Bertha is so desperate that she'll date anyone, even William: he's uglier than a squashed toad on the highway, and that's on his good days.
Colon before definition
For years while I was reading Shakespeare's Othello and criticism on it, I had to constantly look up the word "egregious" since the villain uses that word: outstandingly bad or shocking.
Colon before explanation
I guess I can say I had a rough weekend: I had chest pain and spent all Saturday and Sunday in the emergency room.

Some writers use fragments (incomplete sentences) before a colon for emphasis or stylistic preferences (to show a character's voice in literature), as in this example:

Dinner: chips and juice. What a well-rounded diet I have.

The Bedford Handbook describes several uses of a colon. For example, one can use a colon after an independent clause to direct attention to a list, an appositive, or a quotation, and it can be used between independent clauses if the second summarizes or explains the first. In non-literary or non-expository uses, one may use a colon after the salutation in a formal letter, to indicate hours and minutes, to show proportions, between a title and subtitle, and between city and publisher in bibliographic entries.[14]

Luca Serianni, an Italian scholar who helped to define and develop the colon as a punctuation mark, identified four punctuational modes for it: syntactical-deductive, syntactical-descriptive, appositive, and segmental.[15]

Syntactical-deductive

The colon introduces the logical consequence, or effect, of a fact stated before.

There was only one possible explanation: the train had never arrived.

Syntactical-descriptive

In this sense the colon introduces a description; in particular, it makes explicit the elements of a set.

I have three sisters: Daphne, Rose, and Suzanne.

Syntactical-descriptive colons may separate the numbers indicating hours, minutes, and seconds in abbreviated measures of time.[16]

The concert begins at 21:45.
The rocket launched at 09:15:05.

British English, however, more frequently uses a point for this purpose:

The programme will begin at 8.00 pm.
You will need to arrive by 14.30.[17]

A colon is also used in the descriptive location of a book verse if the book is divided into verses, such as in the Bible or the Quran:

"Isaiah 42:8"
"Deuteronomy 32:39"
"Quran 10:5"

Appositive

Luruns could not speak: he was drunk.[18]

An appositive colon also separates the subtitle of a work from its principal title. (In effect, the example given above illustrates an appositive use of the colon as an abbreviation for the conjunction 'because'.) Dillon has noted the impact of colons on scholarly articles,[19][20] but the reliability of colons as a predictor of quality or impact has also been challenged.[21][22] In titles, neither needs to be a complete sentence as titles do not represent expository writing:

Star Wars Episode VI: Return of the Jedi

Segmental

Like a dash or quotation mark, a segmental colon introduces speech. The segmental function was once a common means of indicating an unmarked quotation on the same line. The following example is from the grammar book The King's English:

Benjamin Franklin proclaimed the virtue of frugality: A penny saved is a penny earned.

This form is still used in written dialogues, such as in a play. The colon indicates that the words following an individual's name are spoken by that individual.

Patient: Doctor, I feel like a pair of curtains.
Doctor: Pull yourself together!

Use of capitals

Use of capitalization or lower-case after a colon varies. In British English, and in most Commonwealth countries, the word following the colon is in lower case unless it is normally capitalized for some other reason, as with proper nouns and acronyms. British English also capitalizes a new sentence introduced by colon's segmental use.

American English goes further and permits writers to similarly capitalize the first word of any independent clause following a colon. This follows the guidelines of some modern American style guides, including those published by the Associated Press and the Modern Language Association. The Chicago Manual of Style, however, requires capitalization only when the colon introduces a direct quotation, a direct question, or two or more complete sentences.[23]

In many European languages, the colon is usually followed by a lower-case letter unless the upper case is required for other reasons, as with British English. German usage requires capitalization of independent clauses following a colon.[24] Dutch further capitalizes the first word of any quotation following a colon, even if it is not a complete sentence on its own.[25]

Spacing

In print, a thin space was traditionally placed before a colon and a thick space after it. In modern English-language printing, no space is placed before a colon and a single space is placed after it.[26][27] In French-language typing and printing, the traditional rules are preserved.

One or two spaces may be and have been used after a colon. The older convention (designed to be used by monospaced fonts) was to use two spaces after a colon.[28]

Usage in other languages

Suffix separator

In Finnish and Swedish, the colon can appear inside words in a manner similar to the apostrophe in the English possessive case, connecting a grammatical suffix to an abbreviation or initialism, a special symbol, or a digit (e.g., Finnish USA:n and Swedish USA:s for the genitive case of "USA", Finnish %:ssa for the inessive case of "%", or Finnish 20:een for the illative case of "20").

Abbreviation mark

Written Swedish uses colons in contractions, such as S:t for Sankt (Swedish for "Saint") – for example in the name of the Stockholm metro station S:t Eriksplan, and k:a for kyrka ("church") – for instance Svenska k:a (Svenska kyrkan), the Evangelical Lutheran national Church of Sweden. This can even occur in people's names, for example Antonia Ax:son Johnson (Ax:son for Axelson). Early Modern English texts also used colons to mark abbreviations.[29][30]

Word separator

 
15th century Bible text in Ge'ez script showing colons between the words.

In Ethiopia, both Amharic and Ge'ez script used and sometimes still use a colon-like mark as word separator.

End of sentence or verse

In Armenian, a colon indicates the end of a sentence, similar to a Latin full stop or period.

In Hebrew, the sof pasuq is used in some writings such as prayer books to signal the end of a verse.

Score divider

In German, a colon divides the scores of opponents in sports and games. A result of 149–0 would be written as 149 : 0 in German.

Mathematics and logic

The colon is used in mathematics, cartography, model building, and other fields—in this context it denotes a ratio or a scale, as in 3∶1 (pronounced "three to one").[1]

When a ratio is reduced to a simpler form, such as 10∶15 to 2∶3, this may be expressed with a double colon as 10∶15∶∶2∶3; this would be read "10 is to 15 as 2 is to 3". This form is also used in tests of logic where the question of "Dog is to Puppy as Cat is to _____?" can be expressed as "Dog∶Puppy∶∶Cat∶_____". For these usages the proper Unicode symbol is (U+2236 RATIO) that is a little higher up than the normal colon. Compare 2∶3 (ratio colon) with 2:3 (normal colon).

In some languages (e.g. German, Russian, and French), the colon is the commonly used sign for division (instead of ÷). (See also Division sign and Division (mathematics) § Notation.)

The notation |G : H| may also denote the index of a subgroup.

The notation ƒ : X → Y indicates that f is a function with domain X and codomain Y.

The combination with an equal sign () is used for definitions.

In mathematical logic, when using set-builder notation for describing the characterizing property of a set, it is used as an alternative to a vertical bar (which is the ISO 31-11 standard), to mean "such that". Example:

  (S is the set of all x in   (the real numbers) such that x is strictly greater than 1 and strictly smaller than 3)

In older literature on mathematical logic, it is used to indicate how expressions should be bracketed (see Glossary of Principia Mathematica).

In type theory and programming language theory, the colon sign after a term is used to indicate its type, sometimes as a replacement to the "∈" symbol. Example:

 .

A colon is also sometimes used to indicate a tensor contraction involving two indices, and a double colon (::) for a contraction over four indices.

A colon is also used to denote a parallel sum operation involving two operands (many authors, however, instead use a sign and a few even a for this purpose).

Computing

The character was on early typewriters and therefore appeared in most text encodings, such as Baudot code and EBCDIC. It was placed at code 58 in ASCII and from there inherited into Unicode. Unicode also defines several related characters:

  • U+003A : COLON
  • U+02D0 ː MODIFIER LETTER TRIANGULAR COLON, used in IPA.[31]
  • U+10781 𐞁 MODIFIER LETTER SUPERSCRIPT TRIANGULAR COLON, IPA modifier-letter.[32]
  • U+02D1 ˑ MODIFIER LETTER HALF TRIANGULAR COLON, used in IPA.
  • U+10782 𐞂 MODIFIER LETTER SUPERSCRIPT HALF TRIANGULAR COLON, IPA modifier-letter.[32]
  • U+02F8 ˸ MODIFIER LETTER RAISED COLON, used by Uralic Phonetic Alphabet.[33]
  • U+05C3 ׃ HEBREW PUNCTUATION SOF PASUQ, compatible with right-to-left text.
  • U+2236 RATIO, for mathematical usage.
  • U+2254 COLON EQUALS, for use in pretty-printing programming languages.
  • U+2255 EQUALS COLON[34]
  • U+2360 APL FUNCTIONAL SYMBOL QUAD COLON
  • U+2982 Z NOTATION TYPE COLON
  • U+2A74 DOUBLE COLON EQUAL
  • U+2AF6 TRIPLE COLON OPERATOR
  • U+A789 MODIFIER LETTER COLON, see Colon (letter), sometimes used in Windows filenames as it is identical to the colon in the Segoe UI font used for filenames. The colon itself is not permitted as it is a reserved character.
  • U+FE13 PRESENTATION FORM FOR VERTICAL COLON, compatibility character for the Chinese Standard GB 18030.
  • U+FF1A FULLWIDTH COLON, for compatibility with halfwidth and fullwidth fonts.
  • U+FE55 SMALL COLON, compatibility character for the Chinese National Standard CNS 11643.

Programming languages

A number of programming languages, most notably Pascal and Ada, use a colon immediately followed by an equals sign (:=) as the assignment operator, to distinguish it from a single equals which is an equality test (C instead used a single equals as assignment, and a double equals as the equality test).[35][36]

Many languages including C and Java use the colon to indicate the text before it is a label, such as a target for a goto or an introduction to a case in a switch statement.[37]: 131 [38] In a related use, Python uses a colon to separate a control statement from the block of statements it controls:[39]

if test(x): print("test(x) is true!") else: print("test(x) is not true...") 

In a number of languages, including JavaScript, colons are used to define name–value pairs in a dictionary or object.[40]: 96–100  This is also used by data formats such as JSON.[41] Some other languages use an equals sign.

var obj = { name: "Charles", age: 18, } 

The colon is used as part of the ?: conditional operator in C and many other languages.[37]: 90 

C++ uses a double colon as the scope resolution operator, and class member access.[42] Most other languages use a period but C++ had to use this for compatibility with C. Another language using colons for scope resolution is Erlang, which uses a single colon.[43]

In BASIC, it is used as a separator between the statements or instructions in a single line. Most other languages use a semicolon, but BASIC had used semicolon to separate items in print statements.[44]

In Forth, a colon precedes definition of a new word.[45]

Haskell uses a colon (pronounced as "cons", short for "construct") as an operator to add an element to the front of a list:[46]

"child" : ["woman", "man"] -- equals ["child","woman","man"] 

while a double colon :: is read as "has type of" (compare scope resolution operator):[47]

("text", False) :: ([Char], Bool) 

The ML languages (such as Standard ML) have the above reversed, where the double colon (::) is used to add an element to the front of a list; and the single colon (:) is used for type guards.[48]: 20, 70 

MATLAB uses the colon as a binary operator that generates vectors, as well as to select particular portions of existing matrices.

APL uses the colon:

  • to introduce a control structure element. In this usage it must be the first non-blank character of the line.[49]: 64 
  • after a label name that will be the target of a :goto or a right-pointing arrow (Note: this style of programming is deprecated and programmers are encouraged to use control structures instead).[49]: 64 
  • to separate a guard (boolean expression) from its expression in a dynamic function.[49]: 111  Two colons are used for an Error guard (one or more error numbers).[49]: 115 
  • Colon + space are used in class definitions to indicate inheritance.[49]: 135 
  • ⍠ (a colon in a box) is used by APL for its variant operator.[49]: 340 

The colon is also used in many operating systems commands.[50]

In the esoteric programming language INTERCAL, the colon is called "two-spot" and is used to identify a 32-bit variable—distinct from a spot (.) which identifies a 16-bit variable.[51]: 3 

Addresses

Internet URLs use the colon to separate the protocol (such as http:) from the hostname or IP address.[52]

In an IPv6 address, colons (and one optional double colon) separate up to 8 groups of 16 bits in hexadecimal representation.[53] In a URL, a colon follows the initial scheme name (such as HTTP and FTP), and separates a port number from the hostname or IP address.[52]

In Microsoft Windows filenames, the colon is reserved for use in alternate data streams and cannot appear in a filename.[54] It was used as the directory separator in Classic Mac OS, and was difficult to use in early versions of the newer BSD-based macOS due to code swapping the slash and colon to try to preserve this usage. In most systems it is often difficult to put a colon in a filename as the shell interprets it for other purposes.

CP/M and early versions of MSDOS required the colon after the names of devices, such as CON: though this gradually disappeared except for disks (where it had to be between the disk name and the required path representation of the file as in C:\Windows\). This then migrated to use in URLs.[52]

Text markup

It is often used as a single post-fix delimiter, signifying a token keyword had immediately preceded it or the transition from one mode of character string interpretation to another related mode. Some applications, such as the widely used MediaWiki, utilize the colon as both a pre-fix and post-fix delimiter.

In wiki markup, the colon is often used to indent text. Common usage includes separating or marking comments in a discussion as replies, or to distinguish certain parts of a text.

Markup Renders as
Normal text. :Indented text by the means of a colon. ::The gap increases with colon number. 

Normal text.

Indented text by the means of a colon.
The gap increases with colon number.

In human-readable text messages, a colon, or multiple colons, is sometimes used to denote an action (similar to how asterisks are used)[original research?] or to emote (for example, in vBulletin). In the action denotation usage it has the inverse function of quotation marks, denoting actions where unmarked text is assumed to be dialogue. For example:

Tom: Pluto is so small; it should not be considered a planet. It is tiny!
Mark: Oh really? ::drops Pluto on Tom's head:: Still think it's small now?

Colons may also be used for sounds, e.g., ::click::, though sounds can also be denoted by asterisks or other punctuation marks.

Colons can also be used to represent eyes in emoticons.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ The work was published anonymously and attributed to George Puttenham in reprints.[7]

References

  1. ^ a b c d "Colon". The Punctuation Guide. Retrieved 22 November 2020.
  2. ^ "punctuation". The Economist Style Guide.
  3. ^ International Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE) Uniform Requirements for Manuscripts Submitted to Biomedical Journals: Sample References, United States National Library of Medicine, retrieved 2013-03-01
  4. ^ "How to Cite the Bible*. Guide for Four Citation Styles: MLA, APA, SBL, CHICAGO" (PDF). jbu.edu. John Brown University.
  5. ^ Oxford English Dictionary, 1st ed. "colon, n.²" Oxford University Press (Oxford), 1891.
  6. ^ Nicolas, Nick. "Greek Unicode Issues: Punctuation Archived 6 August 2012 at archive.today". 2005. Accessed 7 October 2014.
  7. ^ a b Edward Arber, ed. (1869). The Arte of English Poesie : 1589. London: Alex. Murray & Son. p. 88.
  8. ^ Scott McMillin, ed. (2001). The first quarto of Othello. United Kingdom: Cambridge University Press. p. 22. ISBN 978-0-521-56257-7.
  9. ^ Dean, Paul (25 April 2008). "Extreme Type Terminology Part 4: Numerals and Punctuation". I Love Typography. Retrieved 28 November 2014.
  10. ^ Martens, Nick (20 January 2010). . The Bygone Bureau. Archived from the original on 22 November 2014. Retrieved 28 November 2014.
  11. ^ Trask, Larry. "The Colon". University of Sussex. Retrieved 28 November 2014.
  12. ^ John Mason's work, An Essay on Elocution (1748), notes that "A Comma Stops the Voice while we may privately tell one, a Semi Colon two; a Colon three: and a Period four."
  13. ^ "Colons: How to Use Them". The MLA Style Center. 2017-09-20. Retrieved 2020-08-17.
  14. ^ Hacker, Diana (2010). The Bedford Handbook. Boston-New York: Bedford/St. Martin's. pp. 384–387. ISBN 978-0-312-65269-2.
  15. ^ Serianni, Luca; Castelvecchi, Alberto (1988). Grammatica italiana. Italiano comune e lingua letteraria. Suoni, forme, costrutti (in Italian). Turin: UTET. ISBN 88-02-04154-7.
  16. ^ Data elements and interchange formats – Information interchange – Representation of dates and times.
  17. ^ Trask, Larry (1997). "The Colon". Guide to Punctuation. Retrieved 26 July 2019.
  18. ^ Example quoted in by Lynne Truss
  19. ^ Dillon, J. T. (1981). "The emergence of the colon: An empirical correlate of scholarship". American Psychologist. 36 (8): 879–884. doi:10.1037/0003-066x.36.8.879.
  20. ^ Dillon, J. T. (1982). "In Pursuit of the Colon: A Century of Scholarly Progress: 1880-1980". The Journal of Higher Education. 53 (1): 93–99. doi:10.2307/1981541. JSTOR 1981541.
  21. ^ Townsend, Michael A.R. (1983). "Titular Colonicity and Scholarship: New Zealand Research and Scholarly Impact" (PDF). New Zealand Journal of Psychology. 12: 41–43.
  22. ^ Lupo, James; Kopelman, Richard E. (1987). "Punctuation and publishability: A reexamination of the colon". American Psychologist. 42 (5): 513. doi:10.1037/0003-066x.42.5.513.a.
  23. ^ "Chicago Style Q&A: Capitalization". Chicagomanualofstyle.org. Retrieved 8 November 2011.
  24. ^
  25. ^ "Hoofdletter na dubbele punt". taaladvies.net. Retrieved 8 November 2011.
  26. ^ DeRespinis, Francis; Hayward, Peter; Jenkins, Jana; Laird, Amy; McDonald, Leslie; Radzinski, Eric (2012). The IBM Style Guide: Conventions for Writers and Editors. Boston: IBM Press. p. 43.
  27. ^ Gibaldi, Joseph (2008). MLA Style Manual and Guide to Scholarly Publishing. New York: Modern Language Association of America. p. 91.
  28. ^ Paterson, Derek (19 November 2009). "How many spaces after a colon?". Absolute Write forums. Post 4. Retrieved 4 November 2012. Back in the typewriter day, when fading ink ribbons could result in commas being mistaken for periods and vice versa, typists were taught to insert 2 spaces after the period to differentiate between the two. The same happened with colons and semicolons: 2 spaces were left after a colon; 1 space after a semicolon.
  29. ^ Ioppolo, Grace (2006). Dramatists and their manuscripts in the age of Shakespeare, Jonson, Middleton and Heywood. Psychology Press. p. 73. ISBN 9780203449424.
  30. ^ Compare: Mueller, Janel; Scodel, Joshua, eds. (2009). Elizabeth I: translations, 1544-1589. University of Chicago Press. p. 460. ISBN 9780226201337. In the medieval and early modern eras, [...] the colon and raised dot [...] signal a contracted word [...].
  31. ^ "The International Phonetic Alphabet". Weston Ruter. 2005. Archived from the original on 29 July 2012. Retrieved 27 October 2011.
  32. ^ a b Miller, Kirk; Ashby, Michael (2020-11-08). "L2/20-252R: Unicode request for IPA modifier-letters (a), pulmonic" (PDF).
  33. ^ Everson, Michael; et al. (20 March 2002). "L2/02-141: Uralic Phonetic Alphabet characters for the UCS" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on 19 February 2018.
  34. ^ Whistler, Ken; Freytag, Asmus (19 April 2000). "L2/00-119: Encoding Additional Mathematical Symbols in Unicode" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on 19 February 2018.
  35. ^ "Becomes". Free Pascal and Lazarus Wiki. 4 February 2021. from the original on 2 March 2022.
  36. ^ "Ada Reference Manual - 5.2 Assignment Statements". Ada Conformity Assessment Authority. 2012. Archived from the original on 20 May 2020.
  37. ^ a b ISO/IEC JTC1/SC22/WG14 (7 September 2007). "ISO/IEC 9899:TC3 — Programming languages — C" (PDF). Archived from the original on 16 April 2020.
  38. ^ "The Java® Language Specification - Chapter 14. Blocks, Statements, and Patterns". Oracle Help Center. Oracle. 23 February 2022. from the original on 8 June 2022.
  39. ^ "The Python Language Reference - 8. Compound statements". Python Software Foundation. 22 January 2016. Archived from the original on 26 January 2016.
  40. ^ ECMA TC39 (June 2022). ECMA-262 (PDF) (13th ed.). Ecma International. (PDF) from the original on 4 July 2022.
  41. ^ T. Bray (December 2017). The JavaScript Object Notation (JSON) Data Interchange Format. IETF. doi:10.17487/RFC8259. ISSN 2070-1721. RFC 8259. Internet Standard. Obsoletes RFC 7159.
  42. ^ "Identifiers". C++ Reference. 16 June 2022. Archived from the original on 18 July 2022.
  43. ^ "Erlang Reference Manual - Expressions". Erlang. Ericsson. 15 July 2022. Archived from the original on 18 July 2022.
  44. ^ "Special Characters in Code (Visual Basic)". Microsoft Docs. Microsoft. 15 September 2021. from the original on 11 April 2022.
  45. ^ "- CORE - Glossary". Forth Standard. Forth-Standard-Committee. from the original on 17 November 2015.
  46. ^ O'Sullivan, Bryan; Stewart, Don; Goerzen, John. "Getting Started". Real World Haskell. Archived from the original on 10 July 2012. Retrieved 8 November 2011.
  47. ^ Lipovača, Miran. "Types and Typeclasses". Learn You a Haskell for Great Good!. Archived from the original on 10 July 2012. Retrieved 8 November 2011.
  48. ^ Milner, Robin; Tofte, Mads; Harper, Robert; MacQueen, David (1997). The Definition of Standard ML (PDF) (Revised ed.). MIT Press. ISBN 0-262-63181-4. (PDF) from the original on 30 April 2020.
  49. ^ a b c d e f "Dyalog APL Language Reference Manual" (PDF). Dyalog Limited. April 2011. (PDF) from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 14 February 2012.
  50. ^ "colon - null utility". IEEE Std 1003.1-2017. The Open Group. 2018. Archived from the original on 17 October 2018.
  51. ^ Woods, Donald R.; Lyon, James M. (1973). . Archived from the original (PS) on 2011-07-16. Retrieved 2012-03-10.
  52. ^ a b c T. Berners-Lee; R. Fielding; L. Masinter (January 2005). Uniform Resource Identifier (URI): Generic Syntax. Network Working Group. doi:10.17487/RFC3986. STD 66. RFC 3986. Internet Standard. Obsoletes RFC 2732, 2396 and 1808. Updated by RFC 6874, 7320 and 8820. Updates RFC 1738.
  53. ^ R. Hinden; S. Deering (February 2006). IP Version 6 Addressing Architecture. Network Working Group. doi:10.17487/RFC4291. RFC 4291. Draft Standard. Obsoletes RFC 3513. Updated by RFC 5952, 6052, 7136, 7346, 7371 and 8064.
  54. ^ "[MS-FSCC]: 2.1.5 Pathname". Microsoft Docs. Microsoft. 24 August 2020. Archived from the original on 22 October 2020.

External links

colon, punctuation, this, article, about, punctuation, mark, colon, like, character, used, alphabetic, letter, some, languages, rather, than, punctuation, colon, letter, other, uses, colon, disambiguation, colon, punctuation, mark, consisting, equally, sized, . This article is about the punctuation mark For a colon like character used as an alphabetic letter in some languages rather than as punctuation see Colon letter For other uses see Colon disambiguation The colon is a punctuation mark consisting of two equally sized dots aligned vertically A colon often precedes an explanation a list 1 or a quoted sentence 2 It is also used between hours and minutes in time 1 between certain elements in medical journal citations 3 between chapter and verse in Bible citations 4 and in the US for salutations in business letters and other formal letter writing 1 ColonU 003A COLON amp colon ː IPA triangular colon letter colon Ratio Contents 1 History 2 Usage in English 2 1 Syntactical deductive 2 2 Syntactical descriptive 2 3 Appositive 2 4 Segmental 2 5 Use of capitals 2 6 Spacing 3 Usage in other languages 3 1 Suffix separator 3 2 Abbreviation mark 3 3 Word separator 3 4 End of sentence or verse 3 5 Score divider 4 Mathematics and logic 5 Computing 5 1 Programming languages 5 2 Addresses 5 3 Text markup 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksHistory EditThis page uses orthographic and related notations For the notations and used in this article see IPA Brackets and transcription delimiters Further information Colon rhetoric In Ancient Greek in rhetoric and prosody the term kῶlon kolon lit limb member of a body did not refer to punctuation but to a member or section of a complete thought or passage see also Colon rhetoric From this usage in palaeography a colon is a clause or group of clauses written as a line in a manuscript 5 In the 3rd century BC Aristophanes of Byzantium is alleged to have devised a punctuation system in which the end of such a kolon was thought to occasion a medium length breath and was marked by a middot In practice we don t have much evidence for its early usage but it was revived later as the ano teleia the modern Greek semicolon 6 Some writers also used a double dot symbol that later came to be used as a full stop or to mark a change of speaker See also Punctuation in Ancient Greek In 1589 in The Arte of English Poesie the English term colon and the corresponding punctuation mark is attested 7 a For these respectes the auncient reformers of language inuented three maner of pauses The shortest pause or intermission they called comma The second they called colon not a peece but as it were a member for his larger length because it occupied twise as much time as the comma The third they called periodus In 1622 in Nicholas Okes print of William Shakespeare s Othello the typographical construction of a colon followed by a hyphen or dash to indicate a restful pause is attested 8 This construction known as the dog s bollocks was once common in British English though this usage is now discouraged 9 10 11 As late as the 18th century John Mason related the appropriateness of a colon to the length of the pause taken when reading the text aloud but silent reading eventually replaced this with other considerations 12 Usage in English EditIn modern English usage a complete sentence precedes a colon while a list description explanation or definition follows it The elements which follow the colon may or may not be a complete sentence since the colon is preceded by a sentence it is a complete sentence whether what follows the colon is another sentence or not While it is acceptable to capitalise the first letter after the colon in American English it is not the case in British English except where a proper noun immediately follows a colon 13 Colon used before list Daequan was so hungry that he ate everything in the house chips cold pizza pretzels and dip hot dogs peanut butter and candy Colon used before a description Bertha is so desperate that she ll date anyone even William he s uglier than a squashed toad on the highway and that s on his good days Colon before definition For years while I was reading Shakespeare sOthelloand criticism on it I had to constantly look up the word egregious since the villain uses that word outstandingly bad or shocking Colon before explanation I guess I can say I had a rough weekend I had chest pain and spent all Saturday and Sunday in the emergency room Some writers use fragments incomplete sentences before a colon for emphasis or stylistic preferences to show a character s voice in literature as in this example Dinner chips and juice What a well rounded diet I have The Bedford Handbook describes several uses of a colon For example one can use a colon after an independent clause to direct attention to a list an appositive or a quotation and it can be used between independent clauses if the second summarizes or explains the first In non literary or non expository uses one may use a colon after the salutation in a formal letter to indicate hours and minutes to show proportions between a title and subtitle and between city and publisher in bibliographic entries 14 Luca Serianni an Italian scholar who helped to define and develop the colon as a punctuation mark identified four punctuational modes for it syntactical deductive syntactical descriptive appositive and segmental 15 Syntactical deductive Edit The colon introduces the logical consequence or effect of a fact stated before There was only one possible explanation the train had never arrived Syntactical descriptive Edit In this sense the colon introduces a description in particular it makes explicit the elements of a set I have three sisters Daphne Rose and Suzanne Syntactical descriptive colons may separate the numbers indicating hours minutes and seconds in abbreviated measures of time 16 The concert begins at 21 45 The rocket launched at 09 15 05 British English however more frequently uses a point for this purpose The programme will begin at 8 00 pm You will need to arrive by 14 30 17 A colon is also used in the descriptive location of a book verse if the book is divided into verses such as in the Bible or the Quran Isaiah 42 8 Deuteronomy 32 39 Quran 10 5 Appositive Edit Luruns could not speak he was drunk 18 An appositive colon also separates the subtitle of a work from its principal title In effect the example given above illustrates an appositive use of the colon as an abbreviation for the conjunction because Dillon has noted the impact of colons on scholarly articles 19 20 but the reliability of colons as a predictor of quality or impact has also been challenged 21 22 In titles neither needs to be a complete sentence as titles do not represent expository writing Star Wars Episode VI Return of the JediSegmental Edit Like a dash or quotation mark a segmental colon introduces speech The segmental function was once a common means of indicating an unmarked quotation on the same line The following example is from the grammar book The King s English Benjamin Franklin proclaimed the virtue of frugality A penny saved is a penny earned This form is still used in written dialogues such as in a play The colon indicates that the words following an individual s name are spoken by that individual Patient Doctor I feel like a pair of curtains Doctor Pull yourself together Use of capitals Edit Use of capitalization or lower case after a colon varies In British English and in most Commonwealth countries the word following the colon is in lower case unless it is normally capitalized for some other reason as with proper nouns and acronyms British English also capitalizes a new sentence introduced by colon s segmental use American English goes further and permits writers to similarly capitalize the first word of any independent clause following a colon This follows the guidelines of some modern American style guides including those published by the Associated Press and the Modern Language Association The Chicago Manual of Style however requires capitalization only when the colon introduces a direct quotation a direct question or two or more complete sentences 23 In many European languages the colon is usually followed by a lower case letter unless the upper case is required for other reasons as with British English German usage requires capitalization of independent clauses following a colon 24 Dutch further capitalizes the first word of any quotation following a colon even if it is not a complete sentence on its own 25 Spacing Edit In print a thin space was traditionally placed before a colon and a thick space after it In modern English language printing no space is placed before a colon and a single space is placed after it 26 27 In French language typing and printing the traditional rules are preserved One or two spaces may be and have been used after a colon The older convention designed to be used by monospaced fonts was to use two spaces after a colon 28 See also Sentence spacingUsage in other languages EditSuffix separator Edit In Finnish and Swedish the colon can appear inside words in a manner similar to the apostrophe in the English possessive case connecting a grammatical suffix to an abbreviation or initialism a special symbol or a digit e g Finnish USA n and Swedish USA s for the genitive case of USA Finnish ssa for the inessive case of or Finnish 20 een for the illative case of 20 Abbreviation mark Edit Written Swedish uses colons in contractions such as S t for Sankt Swedish for Saint for example in the name of the Stockholm metro station S t Eriksplan and k a for kyrka church for instance Svenska k a Svenska kyrkan the Evangelical Lutheran national Church of Sweden This can even occur in people s names for example Antonia Ax son Johnson Ax son for Axelson Early Modern English texts also used colons to mark abbreviations 29 30 Word separator Edit 15th century Bible text in Ge ez script showing colons between the words In Ethiopia both Amharic and Ge ez script used and sometimes still use a colon like mark as word separator End of sentence or verse Edit In Armenian a colon indicates the end of a sentence similar to a Latin full stop or period In Hebrew the sof pasuq is used in some writings such as prayer books to signal the end of a verse Score divider Edit In German a colon divides the scores of opponents in sports and games A result of 149 0 would be written as 149 0 in German Mathematics and logic EditThis section has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Colon punctuation news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message This section possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed January 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message The colon is used in mathematics cartography model building and other fields in this context it denotes a ratio or a scale as in 3 1 pronounced three to one 1 When a ratio is reduced to a simpler form such as 10 15 to 2 3 this may be expressed with a double colon as 10 15 2 3 this would be read 10 is to 15 as 2 is to 3 This form is also used in tests of logic where the question of Dog is to Puppy as Cat is to can be expressed as Dog Puppy Cat For these usages the proper Unicode symbol is U 2236 RATIO that is a little higher up than the normal colon Compare 2 3 ratio colon with 2 3 normal colon In some languages e g German Russian and French the colon is the commonly used sign for division instead of See also Division sign and Division mathematics Notation The notation G H may also denote the index of a subgroup The notation ƒ X Y indicates that f is a function with domain X and codomain Y The combination with an equal sign is used for definitions In mathematical logic when using set builder notation for describing the characterizing property of a set it is used as an alternative to a vertical bar which is the ISO 31 11 standard to mean such that Example S x R 1 lt x lt 3 displaystyle S x in mathbb R 1 lt x lt 3 S is the set of all x in R displaystyle mathbb R the real numbers such that x is strictly greater than 1 and strictly smaller than 3 In older literature on mathematical logic it is used to indicate how expressions should be bracketed see Glossary of Principia Mathematica In type theory and programming language theory the colon sign after a term is used to indicate its type sometimes as a replacement to the symbol Example l x x A A displaystyle lambda x x mathrel A to A A colon is also sometimes used to indicate a tensor contraction involving two indices and a double colon for a contraction over four indices A colon is also used to denote a parallel sum operation involving two operands many authors however instead use a sign and a few even a for this purpose Computing EditThe character was on early typewriters and therefore appeared in most text encodings such as Baudot code and EBCDIC It was placed at code 58 in ASCII and from there inherited into Unicode Unicode also defines several related characters U 003A COLON U 02D0 ː MODIFIER LETTER TRIANGULAR COLON used in IPA 31 U 10781 MODIFIER LETTER SUPERSCRIPT TRIANGULAR COLON IPA modifier letter 32 U 02D1 ˑ MODIFIER LETTER HALF TRIANGULAR COLON used in IPA U 10782 MODIFIER LETTER SUPERSCRIPT HALF TRIANGULAR COLON IPA modifier letter 32 U 02F8 MODIFIER LETTER RAISED COLON used by Uralic Phonetic Alphabet 33 U 05C3 HEBREW PUNCTUATION SOF PASUQ compatible with right to left text U 2236 RATIO for mathematical usage U 2254 COLON EQUALS for use in pretty printing programming languages U 2255 EQUALS COLON 34 U 2360 APL FUNCTIONAL SYMBOL QUAD COLON U 2982 Z NOTATION TYPE COLON U 2A74 DOUBLE COLON EQUAL U 2AF6 TRIPLE COLON OPERATOR U A789 MODIFIER LETTER COLON see Colon letter sometimes used in Windows filenames as it is identical to the colon in the Segoe UI font used for filenames The colon itself is not permitted as it is a reserved character U FE13 PRESENTATION FORM FOR VERTICAL COLON compatibility character for the Chinese Standard GB 18030 U FF1A FULLWIDTH COLON for compatibility with halfwidth and fullwidth fonts U FE55 SMALL COLON compatibility character for the Chinese National Standard CNS 11643 Programming languages Edit See also Semicolon Computing usage A number of programming languages most notably Pascal and Ada use a colon immediately followed by an equals sign as the assignment operator to distinguish it from a single equals which is an equality test C instead used a single equals as assignment and a double equals as the equality test 35 36 Many languages including C and Java use the colon to indicate the text before it is a label such as a target for a goto or an introduction to a case in a switch statement 37 131 38 In a related use Python uses a colon to separate a control statement from the block of statements it controls 39 if test x print test x is true else print test x is not true In a number of languages including JavaScript colons are used to define name value pairs in a dictionary or object 40 96 100 This is also used by data formats such as JSON 41 Some other languages use an equals sign var obj name Charles age 18 The colon is used as part of the conditional operator in C and many other languages 37 90 C uses a double colon as the scope resolution operator and class member access 42 Most other languages use a period but C had to use this for compatibility with C Another language using colons for scope resolution is Erlang which uses a single colon 43 In BASIC it is used as a separator between the statements or instructions in a single line Most other languages use a semicolon but BASIC had used semicolon to separate items in print statements 44 In Forth a colon precedes definition of a new word 45 Haskell uses a colon pronounced as cons short for construct as an operator to add an element to the front of a list 46 child woman man equals child woman man while a double colon is read as has type of compare scope resolution operator 47 text False Char Bool The ML languages such as Standard ML have the above reversed where the double colon is used to add an element to the front of a list and the single colon is used for type guards 48 20 70 MATLAB uses the colon as a binary operator that generates vectors as well as to select particular portions of existing matrices APL uses the colon to introduce a control structure element In this usage it must be the first non blank character of the line 49 64 after a label name that will be the target of a goto or a right pointing arrow Note this style of programming is deprecated and programmers are encouraged to use control structures instead 49 64 to separate a guard boolean expression from its expression in a dynamic function 49 111 Two colons are used for an Error guard one or more error numbers 49 115 Colon space are used in class definitions to indicate inheritance 49 135 a colon in a box is used by APL for its variant operator 49 340 The colon is also used in many operating systems commands 50 In the esoteric programming language INTERCAL the colon is called two spot and is used to identify a 32 bit variable distinct from a spot which identifies a 16 bit variable 51 3 Addresses Edit Internet URLs use the colon to separate the protocol such as http from the hostname or IP address 52 In an IPv6 address colons and one optional double colon separate up to 8 groups of 16 bits in hexadecimal representation 53 In a URL a colon follows the initial scheme name such as HTTP and FTP and separates a port number from the hostname or IP address 52 In Microsoft Windows filenames the colon is reserved for use in alternate data streams and cannot appear in a filename 54 It was used as the directory separator in Classic Mac OS and was difficult to use in early versions of the newer BSD based macOS due to code swapping the slash and colon to try to preserve this usage In most systems it is often difficult to put a colon in a filename as the shell interprets it for other purposes CP M and early versions of MSDOS required the colon after the names of devices such as CON though this gradually disappeared except for disks where it had to be between the disk name and the required path representation of the file as in C Windows This then migrated to use in URLs 52 Text markup Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message It is often used as a single post fix delimiter signifying a token keyword had immediately preceded it or the transition from one mode of character string interpretation to another related mode Some applications such as the widely used MediaWiki utilize the colon as both a pre fix and post fix delimiter In wiki markup the colon is often used to indent text Common usage includes separating or marking comments in a discussion as replies or to distinguish certain parts of a text Markup Renders asNormal text Indented text by the means of a colon The gap increases with colon number Normal text Indented text by the means of a colon The gap increases with colon number dd In human readable text messages a colon or multiple colons is sometimes used to denote an action similar to how asterisks are used original research or to emote for example in vBulletin In the action denotation usage it has the inverse function of quotation marks denoting actions where unmarked text is assumed to be dialogue For example Tom Pluto is so small it should not be considered a planet It is tiny Mark Oh really drops Pluto on Tom s head Still think it s small now Colons may also be used for sounds e g click though sounds can also be denoted by asterisks or other punctuation marks Colons can also be used to represent eyes in emoticons See also EditSemicolon Two dots disambiguation Notes Edit The work was published anonymously and attributed to George Puttenham in reprints 7 References Edit a b c d Colon The Punctuation Guide Retrieved 22 November 2020 punctuation The Economist Style Guide International Committee of Medical Journal Editors ICMJE Uniform Requirements for Manuscripts Submitted to Biomedical Journals Sample References United States National Library of Medicine retrieved 2013 03 01 How to Cite the Bible Guide for Four Citation Styles MLA APA SBL CHICAGO PDF jbu edu John Brown University Oxford English Dictionary 1st ed colon n Oxford University Press Oxford 1891 Nicolas Nick Greek Unicode Issues Punctuation Archived 6 August 2012 at archive today 2005 Accessed 7 October 2014 a b Edward Arber ed 1869 The Arte of English Poesie 1589 London Alex Murray amp Son p 88 Scott McMillin ed 2001 The first quarto of Othello United Kingdom Cambridge University Press p 22 ISBN 978 0 521 56257 7 Dean Paul 25 April 2008 Extreme Type Terminology Part 4 Numerals and Punctuation I Love Typography Retrieved 28 November 2014 Martens Nick 20 January 2010 The Secret History of Typography in the Oxford English Dictionary The Bygone Bureau Archived from the original on 22 November 2014 Retrieved 28 November 2014 Trask Larry The Colon University of Sussex Retrieved 28 November 2014 John Mason s work An Essay on Elocution 1748 notes that A Comma Stops the Voice while we may privately tell one a Semi Colon two a Colon three and a Period four Colons How to Use Them The MLA Style Center 2017 09 20 Retrieved 2020 08 17 Hacker Diana 2010 The Bedford Handbook Boston New York Bedford St Martin s pp 384 387 ISBN 978 0 312 65269 2 Serianni Luca Castelvecchi Alberto 1988 Grammatica italiana Italiano comune e lingua letteraria Suoni forme costrutti in Italian Turin UTET ISBN 88 02 04154 7 Data elements and interchange formats Information interchange Representation of dates and times Trask Larry 1997 The Colon Guide to Punctuation Retrieved 26 July 2019 Example quoted in An Educational Companion toEats Shoots amp Leaves by Lynne Truss Dillon J T 1981 The emergence of the colon An empirical correlate of scholarship American Psychologist 36 8 879 884 doi 10 1037 0003 066x 36 8 879 Dillon J T 1982 In Pursuit of the Colon A Century of Scholarly Progress 1880 1980 The Journal of Higher Education 53 1 93 99 doi 10 2307 1981541 JSTOR 1981541 Townsend Michael A R 1983 Titular Colonicity and Scholarship New Zealand Research and Scholarly Impact PDF New Zealand Journal of Psychology 12 41 43 Lupo James Kopelman Richard E 1987 Punctuation and publishability A reexamination of the colon American Psychologist 42 5 513 doi 10 1037 0003 066x 42 5 513 a Chicago Style Q amp A Capitalization Chicagomanualofstyle org Retrieved 8 November 2011 Duden Newsletter vom 24 08 2001 Hoofdletter na dubbele punt taaladvies net Retrieved 8 November 2011 DeRespinis Francis Hayward Peter Jenkins Jana Laird Amy McDonald Leslie Radzinski Eric 2012 The IBM Style Guide Conventions for Writers and Editors Boston IBM Press p 43 Gibaldi Joseph 2008 MLA Style Manual and Guide to Scholarly Publishing New York Modern Language Association of America p 91 Paterson Derek 19 November 2009 How many spaces after a colon Absolute Write forums Post 4 Retrieved 4 November 2012 Back in the typewriter day when fading ink ribbons could result in commas being mistaken for periods and vice versa typists were taught to insert 2 spaces after the period to differentiate between the two The same happened with colons and semicolons 2 spaces were left after a colon 1 space after a semicolon Ioppolo Grace 2006 Dramatists and their manuscripts in the age of Shakespeare Jonson Middleton and Heywood Psychology Press p 73 ISBN 9780203449424 Compare Mueller Janel Scodel Joshua eds 2009 Elizabeth I translations 1544 1589 University of Chicago Press p 460 ISBN 9780226201337 In the medieval and early modern eras the colon and raised dot signal a contracted word The International Phonetic Alphabet Weston Ruter 2005 Archived from the original on 29 July 2012 Retrieved 27 October 2011 a b Miller Kirk Ashby Michael 2020 11 08 L2 20 252R Unicode request for IPA modifier letters a pulmonic PDF Everson Michael et al 20 March 2002 L2 02 141 Uralic Phonetic Alphabet characters for the UCS PDF Archived PDF from the original on 19 February 2018 Whistler Ken Freytag Asmus 19 April 2000 L2 00 119 Encoding Additional Mathematical Symbols in Unicode PDF Archived PDF from the original on 19 February 2018 Becomes Free Pascal and Lazarus Wiki 4 February 2021 Archived from the original on 2 March 2022 Ada Reference Manual 5 2 Assignment Statements Ada Conformity Assessment Authority 2012 Archived from the original on 20 May 2020 a b ISO IEC JTC1 SC22 WG14 7 September 2007 ISO IEC 9899 TC3 Programming languages C PDF Archived from the original on 16 April 2020 The Java Language Specification Chapter 14 Blocks Statements and Patterns Oracle Help Center Oracle 23 February 2022 Archived from the original on 8 June 2022 The Python Language Reference 8 Compound statements Python Software Foundation 22 January 2016 Archived from the original on 26 January 2016 ECMA TC39 June 2022 ECMA 262 PDF 13th ed Ecma International Archived PDF from the original on 4 July 2022 T Bray December 2017 The JavaScript Object Notation JSON Data Interchange Format IETF doi 10 17487 RFC8259 ISSN 2070 1721 RFC 8259 Internet Standard Obsoletes RFC 7159 Identifiers C Reference 16 June 2022 Archived from the original on 18 July 2022 Erlang Reference Manual Expressions Erlang Ericsson 15 July 2022 Archived from the original on 18 July 2022 Special Characters in Code Visual Basic Microsoft Docs Microsoft 15 September 2021 Archived from the original on 11 April 2022 CORE Glossary Forth Standard Forth Standard Committee Archived from the original on 17 November 2015 O Sullivan Bryan Stewart Don Goerzen John Getting Started Real World Haskell Archived from the original on 10 July 2012 Retrieved 8 November 2011 Lipovaca Miran Types and Typeclasses Learn You a Haskell for Great Good Archived from the original on 10 July 2012 Retrieved 8 November 2011 Milner Robin Tofte Mads Harper Robert MacQueen David 1997 The Definition of Standard ML PDF Revised ed MIT Press ISBN 0 262 63181 4 Archived PDF from the original on 30 April 2020 a b c d e f Dyalog APL Language Reference Manual PDF Dyalog Limited April 2011 Archived PDF from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 14 February 2012 colon null utility IEEE Std 1003 1 2017 The Open Group 2018 Archived from the original on 17 October 2018 Woods Donald R Lyon James M 1973 INTERCAL reference manual Archived from the original PS on 2011 07 16 Retrieved 2012 03 10 a b c T Berners Lee R Fielding L Masinter January 2005 Uniform Resource Identifier URI Generic Syntax Network Working Group doi 10 17487 RFC3986 STD 66 RFC 3986 Internet Standard Obsoletes RFC 2732 2396 and 1808 Updated by RFC 6874 7320 and 8820 Updates RFC 1738 R Hinden S Deering February 2006 IP Version 6 Addressing Architecture Network Working Group doi 10 17487 RFC4291 RFC 4291 Draft Standard Obsoletes RFC 3513 Updated by RFC 5952 6052 7136 7346 7371 and 8064 MS FSCC 2 1 5 Pathname Microsoft Docs Microsoft 24 August 2020 Archived from the original on 22 October 2020 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Colons Using the Colon On line Writing Lab Northland Community and Technical College Archived from the original on 16 October 2014 Retrieved 2 December 2013 Walden University Guides Punctuation Colons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Colon punctuation amp oldid 1136042812, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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