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Wikipedia

Slash (punctuation)

The slash is the oblique slanting line punctuation mark /. Also known as a stroke, a solidus or several other historical or technical names including oblique and virgule. Once used to mark periods and commas, the slash is now used to represent division and fractions, exclusive 'or' and inclusive 'or', and as a date separator.

/
Slash or solidus
 ⁄   ∕ 
Fraction slash Division slash Fullwidth solidus

A slash in the reverse direction \ is known as a backslash.

History

Slashes may be found in early writing as a variant form of dashes, vertical strokes, etc. The present use of a slash distinguished from such other marks derives from the medieval European virgule (Latin: virgula, lit. "twig"), which was used as a period, scratch comma, and caesura mark.[1][2] (The first sense was eventually lost to the low dot and the other two developed separately into the comma , and caesura mark ||) Its use as a comma became especially widespread in France, where it was also used to mark the continuation of a word onto the next line of a page, a sense later taken on by the hyphen -.[3] The Fraktur script used throughout Central Europe in the early modern period used a single slash as a scratch comma and a double slash // as a dash. The double slash developed into the double oblique hyphen and double hyphen or before being usually simplified into various single dashes.

In the 18th century, the mark was generally known in English as the "oblique".[4] The variant "oblique stroke" was increasingly shortened to "stroke", which became the common British name for the character, although printers and publishing professionals often instead referred to it as an "oblique". In the 19th and early 20th century, it was also widely known as the "shilling mark" or "solidus", from its use as a notation or abbreviation for the shilling.[5][6] The name "slash" is a recent development, not appearing in Webster's Dictionary until the Third Edition (1961)[7][a] but has gained wide currency through its use in computing, a context where it is sometimes used in British English in preference to "stroke". Clarifying terms such as "forward slash" have been coined owing to widespread use of Microsoft's DOS and Windows operating systems, which use the backslash extensively.[9][10]

Usage

Disjunction and conjunction

Connecting alternatives

The slash is commonly used in many languages as a shorter substitute for the conjunction "or", typically with the sense of exclusive or (e.g., Y/N permits yes or no but not both).[11] Its use in this sense is somewhat informal,[12] although it is used in philology to note variants (e.g., virgula/uirgula) and etymologies (e.g., F. virgule/LL. virgula/L. virga/PIE. *wirgā).[3]

Such slashes may be used to avoid taking a position in naming disputes. One example is the Syriac naming dispute, which prompted the US and Swedish censuses to use the respective official designations "Assyrian/Chaldean/Syriac" and "Assyrier/Syrianer" for the ethnic group.

In particular, since the late 20th century, the slash is used to permit more gender-neutral language in place of the traditional masculine or plural gender neutrals. In the case of English, this is usually restricted to degendered pronouns such as "he/she" or "s/he". Most other Indo-European languages include more far-reaching use of grammatical gender. In these, the separate gendered desinences (grammatical suffices) of the words may be given divided by slashes or set off with parentheses. For example, in Spanish, hijo is a son and a hija is a daughter; some proponents of gender-neutral language advocate the use of hijo/a or hijo(a) when writing for a general audience or addressing a listener of unknown gender.[13][14][15][16] Less commonly, the æ[citation needed] ligature or at sign ⟨@⟩ is used instead: hij@. Similarly, in German and some Scandinavian and Baltic languages, Sekretär refers to any secretary and Sekretärin to an explicitly female secretary; some advocates of gender neutrality support forms such as Sekretär/-in for general use. This does not always work smoothly, however: problems arise in the case of words like Arzt ("doctor") where the explicitly female form Ärztin is umlauted and words like Chinese ("Chinese person") where the explicitly female form Chinesin loses the terminal -e.

Connecting non-contrasting items

The slash is also used as a shorter substitute for the conjunction "and" or inclusive or (i.e., A or B or both),[12] typically in situations where it fills the role of a hyphen or en dash. For example, the "Hemingway/Faulkner generation" might be used to discuss the era of the Lost Generation inclusive of the people around and affected by both Hemingway and Faulkner. This use is sometimes proscribed, as by New Hart's Rules, the style guide for the Oxford University Press.[11]

Presenting routes

The slash, as a form of inclusive or, is also used to punctuate the stages of a route (e.g., Shanghai/Nanjing/Wuhan/Chongqing as stops on a tour of the Yangtze).[3]

Introducing topic shifts

The word "slash" is also developing as a way to introduce topic shifts or follow-up statements. "Slash" can introduce a follow up statement, such as, "I really love that hot dog place on Liberty Street. Slash can we go there tomorrow?" It can also indicate a shift to an unrelated topic, as in "JUST SAW ALEX! Slash I just chubbed on oatmeal raisin cookies at north quad and i miss you." The new usage of "slash" appears most frequently in spoken conversation, though it can also appear in writing.[17]

In speech

Sometimes the word "slash" is used in speech as a conjunction to represent the written role of the character (as if a written slash were being read aloud from text), e.g. "bee slash mosquito protection" for a beekeeper's net hood,[18] and "There's a little bit of nectar slash honey over here, but really it's not a lot." (said by a beekeeper examining in a beehive),[19] and "Gastornis slash Diatryma" for two supposed genera of prehistoric birds which are now thought to be one genus.[20]

Mathematics

Fractions

The fraction slash ⟨ ⁄ ⟩ is used between two numbers to indicate a fraction or ratio. Such formatting developed as a way to write the horizontal fraction bar on a single line of text. It is first attested in England and Mexico in the 18th century.[21] This notation is known as an online, solidus,[22] or shilling fraction.[23] Nowadays fractions, unlike inline division, are often given using smaller numbers, superscript, and subscript (e.g., 2343). This notation is responsible for the current form of the percent ⟨%⟩, permille ⟨‰⟩, and permyriad ⟨‱⟩ signs, developed from the horizontal form 0/0 which represented an early modern corruption of an Italian abbreviation of per cento.[24] Many fonts draw the fraction slash (and the division slash) less vertical than the slash. The separate encoding is also intended to permit automatic formatting of the preceding and succeeding digits by glyph substitution with numerator and denominator glyphs (e.g., display of "1, fraction slash, 2" as "½"),[25] though this is not yet supported in many environments or fonts. Because of this lack of support, some authors still use Unicode subscripts and superscripts to compose fractions, and many fonts design these characters for this purpose. In addition, all of the multiples less than 1 of 1n for 2 ≤ n ≤ 6 and n = 8 (e.g. 23 and 58), as well as 17, 19, and 110, are in the Unicode Number Forms or Latin-1 Supplement block as precomposed characters.[26]

This notation can also be used when the concept of fractions is extended from numbers to arbitrary rings by the method of localization of a ring.

Division

The division slash ⟨⟩, equivalent to the division sign ÷ ⟩, may be used between two numbers to indicate division. For example, 23 ÷ 43 can also be written as 23 ∕ 43. This use developed from the fraction slash in the late 18th or early 19th century.[21] The formatting was advocated by De Morgan in the mid-19th century.[27]

Quotient of set

A quotient of a set is informally a new set obtained by identifying some elements of the original set. This is denoted as a fraction   (sometimes even as a built fraction), where the numerator   is the original set (often equipped with some algebraic structure). What is appropriate as denominator depends on the context.

In the most general case, the denominator is an equivalence relation   on the original set  , and elements are to be identified in the quotient   if they are equivalent according to  ; this is technically achieved by making   the set of all equivalence classes of  .

In group theory, the slash is used to mark quotient groups. The general form is  , where   is the original group and   is the normal subgroup; this is read "  mod  ", where "mod" is short for "modulo". Formally this is a special case of quotient by an equivalence relation, where   iff   for some  . Since many algebraic structures (rings, vector spaces, etc.) in particular are groups, the same style of quotients extend also to these, although the denominator may need to satisfy additional closure properties for the quotient to preserve the full algebraic structure of the original (e.g. for the quotient of a ring to be a ring, the denominator must be an ideal).

When the original set is the set of integers  , the denominator may alternatively be just an integer:  . This is an alternative notation for the set   of integers modulo n (needed because   is also notation for the very different ring of n-adic integers).   is an abbreviation of   or  , which both are ways of writing the set in question as a quotient of groups.

Combining slash

Slashes may also be used as a combining character in mathematical formulae. The most important use of this is that combining a slash with a relation negates it, producing e.g. 'not equal'   as negation of   or 'not in'   as negation of  ; these slashed relation symbols are always implicitly defined in terms of the non-slashed base symbol. The graphical form of the negation slash is mostly the same as for a division slash, except in some cases where that would look odd; the negation   of   (divides) and negation   of   (various meanings) customarily both have their negations slashes less steep and in particular shorter than the usual one.

The Feynman slash notation is an unrelated use of combining slashes, mostly seen in quantum field theory. This kind of combining slash takes a vector base symbol and converts it to a matrix quantity. Technically this notation is a shorthand for contracting the vector with the Dirac gamma matrices, so  ; what one gains is not only a more compact formula, but also not having to allocate a letter as the contracted index.

Computing

The slash, sometimes distinguished as "forward slash", is used in computing in a number of ways, primarily as a separator among levels in a given hierarchy, for example in the path of a filesystem.

File paths

The slash is used as the path component separator in many computer operating systems (e.g., Unix's pictures/image.png). In Unix and Unix-like systems, such as macOS and Linux, the slash is also used for the volume root directory (e.g., the initial slash in /usr/john/pictures). Confusion of the slash with the backslash ⟨\⟩ largely arises from the use of the latter as the path component separator in the widely used MS-DOS and Microsoft Windows systems.[9][10]

Networking

The slash is used in a similar fashion in internet URLs (e.g., http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slash_(punctuation)).[11] Often this portion of such URLs corresponds with files on a Unix server with the same name, and this is where this convention for internet URLs comes from.

The slash in an IP address (e.g., 192.0.2.0/29) indicates the prefix size in CIDR notation. The number of addresses of a subnet may be calculated as 2address size − prefix size, in which the address size is 128 for IPv6 and 32 for IPv4. For example, in IPv4, the prefix size /29 gives: 232–29 = 23 = 8 addresses.

Programming

The slash is used as a division operator in most programming languages while APL uses it for reduction (fold) and compression (filter). The double slash is used by Rexx as a modulo operator, and Python (starting in version 2.2) uses a double slash for division which rounds (using floor) to an integer. In Raku the double slash is used as a "defined-or" alternative to ||. A dot and slash ⟨./⟩ is used in MATLAB and GNU Octave to indicate an element-by-element division of matrices.

Comments that begin with /* (a slash and an asterisk) and end with */ were introduced in PL/I and subsequently adopted by SAS, C, Rexx, C++, Java, JavaScript, PHP, CSS, and C#. A double slash // is also used by C99, C++, C#, PHP, Java, Swift, and JavaScript to start a single line comment.

In SGML and derived languages such as HTML and XML, a slash is used in closing tags. For example, in HTML, <b> begins a section of bold text and </b> closes it. In XHTML, slashes are also necessary for "self-closing" elements such as the newline command <br /> where HTML has simply <br>.

In a style originating in the Digital Equipment Corporation line of operating systems (OS/8, RT-11, TOPS-10, et cetera), Windows, DOS, some CP/M programs, OpenVMS, and OS/2 all use the slash to indicate command-line options. For example, the command dir/w is understood as using the command dir ("directory") with the "wide" option. Notice that no space is required between the command and the switch; this was the reason for the choice to use backslashes as the path separator since one would otherwise be unable to run a program in a different directory.

Slashes are used as the standard delimiters for regular expressions, although other characters can be used instead.

IBM JCL uses a double slash to start each line in a batch job stream except for /* and /&.

Programs

IRC and many in-game chat clients use the slash to mark commands, such as joining and leaving a chat room or sending private messages. For example, in IRC, /join #services is a command to join the channel "services" and /me is a command to format the following message as though it were an action instead of a spoken message. In Minecraft's chat function, the slash is used for executing console and plugin commands. In Second Life's chat function, the slash is used to select the "communications channel", allowing users to direct commands to virtual objects "listening" on different channels. For example, if a virtual house's lights were set to use channel 42, the command "/42 on" would turn them on. In Discord, Slash commands are used to send special messages and execute commands, like sending a shrug (¯\_(ツ)_/¯) or a table flip ((╯°□°)╯︵ ┻━┻), or changing your nickname using "/nick". Now, slash commands can also be used to use Discord bots.

The Gedcom standard for exchanging computerized genealogical data uses slashes to delimit surnames. Example: Bill /Smith/ Jr. Slashes around surnames are also used in Personal Ancestral File.

Currency

 
Sign in Kisoro with prices in Ugandan shillings; note the use of the '/=' notation.

The slash (as the "shilling mark" or "solidus")[28] was an abbreviation for the shilling, a former coin of the United Kingdom and its former colonies. Before the decimalisation of currency in Britain, its currency abbreviations (collectively £sd) represented their Latin names, derived from a medieval French modification of the late Roman libra, solidus, and denarius.[29] Thus, one penny less than two pounds was written £1 19s. 11d. During the period when English orthography included the long s, ſ, the ſ came to be written as a single slash.[30][31] The s. and the d. might therefore be omitted, and "2/6" meant "two shillings and sixpence".[28] Amounts in full pounds, shillings and pence could be written in many different ways, for example: £1 9s 6d, £1.9.6, £1-9-6, and even £1/9/6d (with a slash used also to separate pounds and shillings).[32] The same style was also used under the British Raj and early independent India for the predecimalization rupee/anna/pie system.[33]

In five East African countries (Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda, Somalia, and the de facto country of Somaliland), where the national currencies are denominated in shillings, the decimal separator is a slash mark (e.g., 2/50). Where the minor unit is zero, an equals sign is used (e.g., 5/=).

Dates

Slashes are a common calendar date separator[11] used across many countries and by some standards such as the Common Log Format used by web servers. Depending on context, it may be in the form Day/Month/Year, Month/Day/Year, or Year/Month/Day. If only two elements are present, they typically denote a day and month in some order. For example, 9/11 is a common American way of writing the date 11 September; Britons write this as 11/9. Owing to the ambiguity across cultures, the practice of using only two elements to denote a date is sometimes proscribed.[34]

Because of the world's many varying conventional date and time formats, ISO 8601 advocates the use of a Year-Month-Day system separated by hyphens (e.g., Victory in Europe Day occurred on 1945-05-08). In the ISO 8601 system, slashes represent date ranges: "1939/1945" represents what is more commonly written as "1935–1945". The autumn term of a northern-hemisphere school year might be marked "2010-09-01/12-22".

In English, a range marked by a slash often has a separate meaning from one marked by a dash or hyphen.[11] "24/25 December" would mark the time shared by both days (i.e., the night from Christmas Eve to Christmas morning) rather than the time made up by both days together, which would be written "24–25 December". Similarly, a historical reference to "1066/67" might imply an event occurred during the winter of late 1066 and early 1067,[35] whereas a reference to 1066–67 would cover the entirety of both years. The usage was particularly common in British English during World War II, where such slash dates were used for night-bombing air raids. It is also used by some police forces in the United States.

Numbering

The slash is used in numbering to note totals. For example, "page 17/35" indicates that the relevant passage is on the 17th page of a 35-page document. Similarly, the marking "#333/500" on a product indicates it is the 333rd out of 500 identical products or out of a batch of 500 such products. For scores on schoolwork, in games, &c., "85/100" indicates 85 points were attained out of a possible 100.

Slashes are also sometimes used to mark ranges in numbers that already include hyphens or dashes. One example is the ISO treatment of dating. Another is the US Air Force's treatment of aircraft serial numbers, which are normally written to note the fiscal year and aircraft number. For example, "85-1000" notes the thousandth aircraft ordered in fiscal year 1985. To indicate the next fifty subsequent aircraft, a slash is used in place of a hyphen or dash: "85-1001/1050".

Linguistic transcription

A pair of slashes (as "slants") are used in the transcription of speech to enclose pronunciations (i.e., phonetic transcriptions). For example, the IPA transcription of the English pronunciation of "solidus" is written /ˈsɒlɪdəs/.[6] Properly, slashes mark broad or phonemic transcriptions, whereas narrow, allophonic transcriptions are enclosed by square brackets. For example, the word "little" may be broadly rendered as /ˈlɪtəl/ but a careful transcription of the velarization of the second L would be written [ˈlɪɾɫ̩].

In sociolinguistics, a double or triple slash may also be used in the transcription of a traditional sociolinguistic interview or in other type of linguistic elicitation to represent simultaneous speech, interruptions, and certain types of speech disfluencies.

Single and double slashes are often used as typographic substitutes for the click letters ǀ, ǁ.

Poetry

The slash is used in various scansion notations for representing the metrical pattern of a line of verse, typically to indicate a stressed syllable.

Line breaks

The slash (as a "virgule") offset by spaces to either side is used to mark line breaks when transcribing text from a multi-line format into a single-line one.[11][36] It is particularly common in quoting poetry, song lyrics, and dramatic scripts, formats where omitting the line breaks risks losing meaningful context. For example, when quoting Hamlet's soliloquy

To be, or not to be, that is the question:
Whether 'tis Nobler in the mind to suffer
The Slings and Arrows of outrageous Fortune,
Or to take Arms against a Sea of troubles,
And by opposing end them...[37]

into a prose paragraph, it is standard to mark the line breaks as "To be, or not to be, that is the question: / Whether 'tis nobler in the mind to suffer / The slings and arrows of outrageous Fortune, / Or to take arms against a sea of troubles, / And by opposing end them..." Less often, virgules are used in marking paragraph breaks when quoting a prose passage. Some style guides, such as Hart's, prefer to use a pipe | in place of the slash to mark these line and paragraph breaks.[11]

The virgule may be thinner than a standard slash when typeset. In computing contexts, it may be necessary to use a non-breaking space before the virgule to prevent it from being widowed on the next line.

Abbreviation

The slash has become standard in several abbreviations. Generally, it is used to mark two-letter initialisms such as A/C (short for "air conditioner"), w/o ("without"), b/w ("black and white" or, less often, "between"), w/e ("whatever" or, less often, "weekend" or "week ending"), i/o ("input/output"), r/w ("read/write"), and n/a ("not applicable"). Other initialisms employing the slash include w/ ("with") and w/r/t ("with regard to"). Such slashed abbreviations are somewhat more common in British English and were more common around the Second World War (as with "S/E" to mean "single-engined"). The abbreviation 24/7 (denoting 24 hours a day, 7 days a week) describes a business that is always open or unceasing activity.[11]

The slash in derived units such as m/s (meters per second) is not an abbreviation slash, but a straight division. It is however in that position read as 'per' rather than e.g. 'over', which can be seen as analogous to units whose symbols are pure abbreviations such as mph (miles per hour), although in abbreviations 'per' is 'p' or dropped entirely (psi, pounds per square inch) rather than a slash.

In the US government, the names of offices within various departments are abbreviated using slashes, starting with the larger office and following with its subdivisions. For example, the Federal Aviation Administration's Office of Commercial Space Transportation is formally abbreviated FAA/AST.

Proofreading

The slash or vertical bar (as a "separatrix") is used in proofreading to mark the end of margin notes[b] or to separate margin notes from one another. The slash is also sometimes used in various proofreading initialisms, such as l/c and u/c for changes to lower and upper case, respectively.

Fiction

The slash is used in fan fiction to mark the romantic pairing a piece will focus upon (e.g., a K/S denoted a Star Trek story would focus on a sexual relationship between Kirk and Spock), a usage which developed in the 1970s from the earlier friendship pairings marked by ampersands (e.g., K&S). The genre as a whole is now known as slash fiction. Because it is more generally associated with homosexual male relationships, lesbian slash fiction is sometimes distinguished as femslash. In situations where other pairings occur, the genres may be distinguished as m/m, f/f, &c.

Libraries

The slash is used under the Anglo-American Cataloguing Rules to separate the title of a work from its statement of responsibility (i.e., the listing of its author, director, &c.). Like a line break, this slash is surrounded by a single space on either side. For example:

  • Gone with the Wind / by Margaret Mitchell.
  • Star Trek II. The Wrath of Khan [videorecording] / Paramount Pictures.

The format is used in both card catalogs and online records.

Addresses

The slash is sometimes used as an abbreviation for building numbers. For example, in some contexts,[where?] 8/A Evergreen Gardens specifies Apartment 8 in Building A of the residential complex Evergreen Gardens. In the United States, however, such an address refers to the first division of Apartment 8 and is simply a variant of Apartment 8A or 8-A. Similarly in the United Kingdom, an address such as 12/2 Anywhere Road means flat (or apartment) 2 in the building numbered 12 on Anywhere Road.

Music

Slashes are used in musical notation as an alternative to writing out specific notes where it is easier to read than traditional notation or where the player can improvise. They are commonly used to indicate chords either in place of or in combination with traditional notation and for drummers as an indication to continue with the previously indicated style.

Sports

A slash is used to mark a spare (knocking down all ten pins in two throws) when scoring ten-pin and duckpin bowling.[39]

Text messaging

In online messaging, a slash might be used to imitate the formatting of a chat command (e.g., writing "/fliptable" as though there were such a command) or the closing tags of languages such as HTML (e.g., writing "/endrant" to end an ironic diatribe or "/s" to mark the preceding text as sarcastic). A pair of slashes is sometimes used as a way to mark italic text, where no special formatting is available (e.g., /italics/).[citation needed]

As a letter

The Iraqw language of Tanzania uses the slash as a letter, representing the voiced pharyngeal fricative, as in /ameeni, "woman".[40]

Spacing

There are usually no spaces either before or after a slash. According to New Hart's Rules: The Oxford Style Guide, a slash is usually written without spacing on either side when it connects single words, letters or symbols.[11] Exceptions are in representing the start of a new line when quoting verse, or a new paragraph when quoting prose. The Chicago Manual of Style also allows spaces when either of the separated items is a compound that itself includes a space: "Our New Zealand / Western Australia trip".[41] (Compare use of an en dash used to separate such compounds.) The Canadian Style: A Guide to Writing and Editing prescribes, "No space before or after an oblique when used between individual words, letters or symbols; one space before and after the oblique when used between longer groups which contain internal spacing", giving the examples "n/a" and "Language and Society / Langue et société".[42]

According to The Chicago Manual of Style, when typesetting a URL or computer path, line breaks should occur before a slash but not in the text between two slashes.[43]

Encoding

 
Though the slash is a reserved character prohibited in Windows file and folder names, the big solidus is permitted (first box above). In this context, it is very similar to the slash (second box).

As a very common character, the slash (as "slant") was originally encoded in ASCII with the decimal code 47 or 0x2F.[44] The same value was used in Unicode, which calls it "solidus" and also adds some more characters:

  • U+002F / SOLIDUS
  • U+0337 ̷ COMBINING SHORT SOLIDUS OVERLAY
  • U+0338 ̸ COMBINING LONG SOLIDUS OVERLAY
  • U+2044 FRACTION SLASH
  • U+2215 DIVISION SLASH
  • U+2571 BOX DRAWINGS LIGHT DIAGONAL UPPER RIGHT TO LOWER LEFT
  • U+29F8 BIG SOLIDUS
  • U+FF0F FULLWIDTH SOLIDUS (fullwidth version of solidus)
  • U+1F67C 🙼 VERY HEAVY SOLIDUS

In XML and HTML, the slash can also be represented with the character entity &sol;  or the numeric character reference &#47;  or &#x2F; .[45]

Alternative names

Name Use case
diagonal An uncommon name for the slash in all its uses,[4] but particularly the less vertical fraction slash.[46]
division slash This is the Unicode Consortium's formal name for the variant of the slash used to mark division.[47] (U+2215 DIVISION SLASH)
forward slash A retronym used to distinguish slash from a backslash following the popularization of MS-DOS and other Microsoft operating systems, which use the backslash for paths in its file system.[9][10] Less often forward stroke (UK), foreslash, front slash, and frontslash. It is not unknown to even see such back-formations as reverse backslash.[48]
fraction slash This is the Unicode Consortium's formal name for the low slash used to mark fractions.[47] (U+2044 FRACTION SLASH)
Also sometimes known as the fraction bar, although this more commonly refers to the horizontal bar style, as in 1/2. When used as a fraction bar, this form of the mark is less vertical than an ASCII slash, generally close to 45° and kerned on both sides;[49] this use is distinguished by Unicode as the fraction slash.[47] (This use is sometimes mistakenly described as the sole meaning of "solidus", with its use as a shilling mark and slash distinguished under the name "virgule".[49][50])
oblique A formerly common name for the slash in all its uses.[4] Also oblique stroke,[51][52] oblique dash, &c.
scratch comma A modern name for the virgule's historic use as a form of comma.[53]
separatrix Originally, the vertical line separating integers from decimals before the advent of the decimal point; later used for the vertical bar or slash used in proofreader's marginalia to denote the intended replacement for a letter or word struckthrough in proofed text[54] or to separate margin notes.[55] Sometimes misapplied to virgules.
shilling mark A development of the long S ſ used as an abbreviation for the (obsolete) British shilling (Latin: solidus).[5] The 'slash' is known as a "shilling stroke".[23]
slant From its shape, an infrequent name except (as slants) in its use to mark pronunciations off from other text[56] and as the original ASCII name of the character.[44] Also slant line(s) or bar(s).[9]
slash mark An alternative name used to distinguish the punctuation mark from the word's other senses.[57]
slat An uncommon name for the slash used by the esoteric programming language INTERCAL.[52] Also slak.[52]
solidus Another name for the mark (derived from the Latin form of 'shilling'), also applied to other slashes separating numbers or letters,[6] used in typography,[49] and adopted by the ISO and Unicode[47][58] as their formal name for the ASCII slash ("slant"). (U+002F / SOLIDUS)

The solidus's use as a division sign is distinguished as the division slash.[47]

strike through The "combining short" or "long solidus overlay" is a diagonal strikethrough,[47] (U+0337 ◌̷ COMBINING SHORT SOLIDUS OVERLAY; U+0338 ◌̸ COMBINING LONG SOLIDUS OVERLAY) designed to produce results like A̷B̷C̷D̷ ̷e̷f̷g̷h̷i̷ or A̸B̸C̸D̸ ̸e̸f̸g̸h̸i̸.
stroke A contraction of the phrase oblique stroke, used in telegraphy.[51] It is particularly employed in reading the mark out loud: "he stroke she" is the common British reading of "he/she".[citation needed] "Slash" has, however, become common in Britain in computing contexts, while some North American amateur radio enthusiasts employ the British "stroke". Less frequently, "stroke" is also used to refer to hyphens.[9]
virgule A development of virgula ("twig"),[2] the original medieval Latin name of the character when it was used as a period, scratch comma,[1] and caesura mark. Now primarily used as the name of the slash when it is used to mark line breaks in quotations.[2] Sometimes mistakenly distinguished as a formal name for the slash, as against the solidus's supposed use as a fraction slash.[49][50] Formerly sometimes anglicized in British sources as the virgil.[3]

The slash may also be read out as and, or, and/or, to, or cum in some compounds separated by a slash; over or out of in fractions, division, and numbering; and per or a(n) in derived units (as km/h) and prices (as $~/kg), where the division slash stands for "each".[9][59]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Nevertheless, the word was already being used in official publications, such as the 1947 style guide of the US Department of Agriculture Forestry Service.[8]
  2. ^ For an example of this in practice, see the section on proofreading marks in New Hart's Rules.[38]

References

  1. ^ a b "virgula, n.", Oxford English Dictionary, 1st ed., Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1917.
  2. ^ a b c "virgule, n.", Oxford English Dictionary, 1st ed., Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1917.
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slash, punctuation, this, article, about, punctuation, filename, root, directory, episode, person, interest, diacritical, mark, stroke, diacritic, technical, reasons, redirects, here, smiley, list, emoticons, slash, oblique, slanting, line, punctuation, mark, . This article is about the punctuation For the filename see Root directory For the tv episode see Person of Interest For the diacritical mark see Stroke diacritic For technical reasons redirects here For the smiley see List of emoticons The slash is the oblique slanting line punctuation mark Also known as a stroke a solidus or several other historical or technical names including oblique and virgule Once used to mark periods and commas the slash is now used to represent division and fractions exclusive or and inclusive or and as a date separator Slash or solidus Fraction slash Division slash Fullwidth solidusA slash in the reverse direction is known as a backslash Contents 1 History 2 Usage 2 1 Disjunction and conjunction 2 1 1 Connecting alternatives 2 1 2 Connecting non contrasting items 2 1 3 Presenting routes 2 1 4 Introducing topic shifts 2 1 5 In speech 2 2 Mathematics 2 2 1 Fractions 2 2 2 Division 2 2 3 Quotient of set 2 2 4 Combining slash 2 3 Computing 2 3 1 File paths 2 3 2 Networking 2 3 3 Programming 2 3 4 Programs 2 4 Currency 2 5 Dates 2 6 Numbering 2 7 Linguistic transcription 2 8 Poetry 2 9 Line breaks 2 10 Abbreviation 2 11 Proofreading 2 12 Fiction 2 13 Libraries 2 14 Addresses 2 15 Music 2 16 Sports 2 17 Text messaging 2 18 As a letter 3 Spacing 4 Encoding 5 Alternative names 6 See also 7 Notes 8 ReferencesHistory EditSlashes may be found in early writing as a variant form of dashes vertical strokes etc The present use of a slash distinguished from such other marks derives from the medieval European virgule Latin virgula lit twig which was used as a period scratch comma and caesura mark 1 2 The first sense was eventually lost to the low dot and the other two developed separately into the comma and caesura mark Its use as a comma became especially widespread in France where it was also used to mark the continuation of a word onto the next line of a page a sense later taken on by the hyphen 3 The Fraktur script used throughout Central Europe in the early modern period used a single slash as a scratch comma and a double slash as a dash The double slash developed into the double oblique hyphen and double hyphen or before being usually simplified into various single dashes In the 18th century the mark was generally known in English as the oblique 4 The variant oblique stroke was increasingly shortened to stroke which became the common British name for the character although printers and publishing professionals often instead referred to it as an oblique In the 19th and early 20th century it was also widely known as the shilling mark or solidus from its use as a notation or abbreviation for the shilling 5 6 The name slash is a recent development not appearing in Webster s Dictionary until the Third Edition 1961 7 a but has gained wide currency through its use in computing a context where it is sometimes used in British English in preference to stroke Clarifying terms such as forward slash have been coined owing to widespread use of Microsoft s DOS and Windows operating systems which use the backslash extensively 9 10 Usage EditDisjunction and conjunction Edit Connecting alternatives Edit See also Gender neutrality in languages with grammatical gender The slash is commonly used in many languages as a shorter substitute for the conjunction or typically with the sense of exclusive or e g Y N permits yes or no but not both 11 Its use in this sense is somewhat informal 12 although it is used in philology to note variants e g virgula uirgula and etymologies e g F virgule LL virgula L virga PIE wirga 3 Such slashes may be used to avoid taking a position in naming disputes One example is the Syriac naming dispute which prompted the US and Swedish censuses to use the respective official designations Assyrian Chaldean Syriac and Assyrier Syrianer for the ethnic group In particular since the late 20th century the slash is used to permit more gender neutral language in place of the traditional masculine or plural gender neutrals In the case of English this is usually restricted to degendered pronouns such as he she or s he Most other Indo European languages include more far reaching use of grammatical gender In these the separate gendered desinences grammatical suffices of the words may be given divided by slashes or set off with parentheses For example in Spanish hijo is a son and a hija is a daughter some proponents of gender neutral language advocate the use of hijo a or hijo a when writing for a general audience or addressing a listener of unknown gender 13 14 15 16 Less commonly the ae citation needed ligature or at sign is used instead hij Similarly in German and some Scandinavian and Baltic languages Sekretar refers to any secretary and Sekretarin to an explicitly female secretary some advocates of gender neutrality support forms such as Sekretar in for general use This does not always work smoothly however problems arise in the case of words like Arzt doctor where the explicitly female form Arztin is umlauted and words like Chinese Chinese person where the explicitly female form Chinesin loses the terminal e Connecting non contrasting items Edit The slash is also used as a shorter substitute for the conjunction and or inclusive or i e A or B or both 12 typically in situations where it fills the role of a hyphen or en dash For example the Hemingway Faulkner generation might be used to discuss the era of the Lost Generation inclusive of the people around and affected by both Hemingway and Faulkner This use is sometimes proscribed as by New Hart s Rules the style guide for the Oxford University Press 11 Presenting routes Edit The slash as a form of inclusive or is also used to punctuate the stages of a route e g Shanghai Nanjing Wuhan Chongqing as stops on a tour of the Yangtze 3 Introducing topic shifts Edit The word slash is also developing as a way to introduce topic shifts or follow up statements Slash can introduce a follow up statement such as I really love that hot dog place on Liberty Street Slash can we go there tomorrow It can also indicate a shift to an unrelated topic as in JUST SAW ALEX Slash I just chubbed on oatmeal raisin cookies at north quad and i miss you The new usage of slash appears most frequently in spoken conversation though it can also appear in writing 17 In speech Edit Sometimes the word slash is used in speech as a conjunction to represent the written role of the character as if a written slash were being read aloud from text e g bee slash mosquito protection for a beekeeper s net hood 18 and There s a little bit of nectar slash honey over here but really it s not a lot said by a beekeeper examining in a beehive 19 and Gastornis slash Diatryma for two supposed genera of prehistoric birds which are now thought to be one genus 20 Mathematics Edit Fractions Edit The fraction slash is used between two numbers to indicate a fraction or ratio Such formatting developed as a way to write the horizontal fraction bar on a single line of text It is first attested in England and Mexico in the 18th century 21 This notation is known as an online solidus 22 or shilling fraction 23 Nowadays fractions unlike inline division are often given using smaller numbers superscript and subscript e g 23 43 This notation is responsible for the current form of the percent permille and permyriad signs developed from the horizontal form 0 0 which represented an early modern corruption of an Italian abbreviation of per cento 24 Many fonts draw the fraction slash and the division slash less vertical than the slash The separate encoding is also intended to permit automatic formatting of the preceding and succeeding digits by glyph substitution with numerator and denominator glyphs e g display of 1 fraction slash 2 as 25 though this is not yet supported in many environments or fonts Because of this lack of support some authors still use Unicode subscripts and superscripts to compose fractions and many fonts design these characters for this purpose In addition all of the multiples less than 1 of 1 n for 2 n 6 and n 8 e g 2 3 and 5 8 as well as 1 7 1 9 and 1 10 are in the Unicode Number Forms or Latin 1 Supplement block as precomposed characters 26 This notation can also be used when the concept of fractions is extended from numbers to arbitrary rings by the method of localization of a ring Division Edit The division slash equivalent to the division sign may be used between two numbers to indicate division For example 23 43 can also be written as 23 43 This use developed from the fraction slash in the late 18th or early 19th century 21 The formatting was advocated by De Morgan in the mid 19th century 27 Quotient of set Edit A quotient of a set is informally a new set obtained by identifying some elements of the original set This is denoted as a fraction S R displaystyle S R sometimes even as a built fraction where the numerator S displaystyle S is the original set often equipped with some algebraic structure What is appropriate as denominator depends on the context In the most general case the denominator is an equivalence relation displaystyle sim on the original set S displaystyle S and elements are to be identified in the quotient S displaystyle S sim if they are equivalent according to displaystyle sim this is technically achieved by making S displaystyle S sim the set of all equivalence classes of displaystyle sim In group theory the slash is used to mark quotient groups The general form is G N displaystyle G N where G displaystyle G is the original group and N displaystyle N is the normal subgroup this is read G displaystyle G mod N displaystyle N where mod is short for modulo Formally this is a special case of quotient by an equivalence relation where g h displaystyle g sim h iff g h n displaystyle g hn for some n N displaystyle n in N Since many algebraic structures rings vector spaces etc in particular are groups the same style of quotients extend also to these although the denominator may need to satisfy additional closure properties for the quotient to preserve the full algebraic structure of the original e g for the quotient of a ring to be a ring the denominator must be an ideal When the original set is the set of integers Z displaystyle mathbb Z the denominator may alternatively be just an integer Z n displaystyle mathbb Z n This is an alternative notation for the set Z n displaystyle mathbb Z n of integers modulo n needed because Z n displaystyle mathbb Z n is also notation for the very different ring of n adic integers Z n displaystyle mathbb Z n is an abbreviation of Z n Z displaystyle mathbb Z n mathbb Z or Z n displaystyle mathbb Z n which both are ways of writing the set in question as a quotient of groups Combining slash Edit Slashes may also be used as a combining character in mathematical formulae The most important use of this is that combining a slash with a relation negates it producing e g not equal displaystyle neq as negation of displaystyle or not in displaystyle notin as negation of displaystyle in these slashed relation symbols are always implicitly defined in terms of the non slashed base symbol The graphical form of the negation slash is mostly the same as for a division slash except in some cases where that would look odd the negation displaystyle nmid of displaystyle mid divides and negation displaystyle nsim of displaystyle sim various meanings customarily both have their negations slashes less steep and in particular shorter than the usual one The Feynman slash notation is an unrelated use of combining slashes mostly seen in quantum field theory This kind of combining slash takes a vector base symbol and converts it to a matrix quantity Technically this notation is a shorthand for contracting the vector with the Dirac gamma matrices so A g m A m displaystyle A gamma mu A mu what one gains is not only a more compact formula but also not having to allocate a letter as the contracted index Computing Edit The slash sometimes distinguished as forward slash is used in computing in a number of ways primarily as a separator among levels in a given hierarchy for example in the path of a filesystem File paths Edit The slash is used as the path component separator in many computer operating systems e g Unix s pictures image png In Unix and Unix like systems such as macOS and Linux the slash is also used for the volume root directory e g the initial slash in usr john pictures Confusion of the slash with the backslash largely arises from the use of the latter as the path component separator in the widely used MS DOS and Microsoft Windows systems 9 10 Networking Edit The slash is used in a similar fashion in internet URLs e g http en wikipedia org wiki Slash punctuation 11 Often this portion of such URLs corresponds with files on a Unix server with the same name and this is where this convention for internet URLs comes from The slash in an IP address e g 192 0 2 0 29 indicates the prefix size in CIDR notation The number of addresses of a subnet may be calculated as 2address size prefix size in which the address size is 128 for IPv6 and 32 for IPv4 For example in IPv4 the prefix size 29 gives 232 29 23 8 addresses Programming Edit The slash is used as a division operator in most programming languages while APL uses it for reduction fold and compression filter The double slash is used by Rexx as a modulo operator and Python starting in version 2 2 uses a double slash for division which rounds using floor to an integer In Raku the double slash is used as a defined or alternative to A dot and slash is used in MATLAB and GNU Octave to indicate an element by element division of matrices Comments that begin with a slash and an asterisk and end with were introduced in PL I and subsequently adopted by SAS C Rexx C Java JavaScript PHP CSS and C A double slash is also used by C99 C C PHP Java Swift and JavaScript to start a single line comment In SGML and derived languages such as HTML and XML a slash is used in closing tags For example in HTML lt b gt begins a section of bold text and lt b gt closes it In XHTML slashes are also necessary for self closing elements such as the newline command lt br gt where HTML has simply lt br gt In a style originating in the Digital Equipment Corporation line of operating systems OS 8 RT 11 TOPS 10 et cetera Windows DOS some CP M programs OpenVMS and OS 2 all use the slash to indicate command line options For example the command dir w is understood as using the command dir directory with the wide option Notice that no space is required between the command and the switch this was the reason for the choice to use backslashes as the path separator since one would otherwise be unable to run a program in a different directory Slashes are used as the standard delimiters for regular expressions although other characters can be used instead IBM JCL uses a double slash to start each line in a batch job stream except for and amp Programs Edit IRC and many in game chat clients use the slash to mark commands such as joining and leaving a chat room or sending private messages For example in IRC join services is a command to join the channel services and me is a command to format the following message as though it were an action instead of a spoken message In Minecraft s chat function the slash is used for executing console and plugin commands In Second Life s chat function the slash is used to select the communications channel allowing users to direct commands to virtual objects listening on different channels For example if a virtual house s lights were set to use channel 42 the command 42 on would turn them on In Discord Slash commands are used to send special messages and execute commands like sending a shrug ツ or a table flip or changing your nickname using nick Now slash commands can also be used to use Discord bots The Gedcom standard for exchanging computerized genealogical data uses slashes to delimit surnames Example Bill Smith Jr Slashes around surnames are also used in Personal Ancestral File Currency Edit Main article Shilling Sign in Kisoro with prices in Ugandan shillings note the use of the notation The slash as the shilling mark or solidus 28 was an abbreviation for the shilling a former coin of the United Kingdom and its former colonies Before the decimalisation of currency in Britain its currency abbreviations collectively sd represented their Latin names derived from a medieval French modification of the late Roman libra solidus and denarius 29 Thus one penny less than two pounds was written 1 19s 11d During the period when English orthography included the long s ſ the ſ came to be written as a single slash 30 31 The s and the d might therefore be omitted and 2 6 meant two shillings and sixpence 28 Amounts in full pounds shillings and pence could be written in many different ways for example 1 9s 6d 1 9 6 1 9 6 and even 1 9 6d with a slash used also to separate pounds and shillings 32 The same style was also used under the British Raj and early independent India for the predecimalization rupee anna pie system 33 In five East African countries Kenya Tanzania Uganda Somalia and the de facto country of Somaliland where the national currencies are denominated in shillings the decimal separator is a slash mark e g 2 50 Where the minor unit is zero an equals sign is used e g 5 Dates Edit Slashes are a common calendar date separator 11 used across many countries and by some standards such as the Common Log Format used by web servers Depending on context it may be in the form Day Month Year Month Day Year or Year Month Day If only two elements are present they typically denote a day and month in some order For example 9 11 is a common American way of writing the date 11 September Britons write this as 11 9 Owing to the ambiguity across cultures the practice of using only two elements to denote a date is sometimes proscribed 34 Because of the world s many varying conventional date and time formats ISO 8601 advocates the use of a Year Month Day system separated by hyphens e g Victory in Europe Day occurred on 1945 05 08 In the ISO 8601 system slashes represent date ranges 1939 1945 represents what is more commonly written as 1935 1945 The autumn term of a northern hemisphere school year might be marked 2010 09 01 12 22 In English a range marked by a slash often has a separate meaning from one marked by a dash or hyphen 11 24 25 December would mark the time shared by both days i e the night from Christmas Eve to Christmas morning rather than the time made up by both days together which would be written 24 25 December Similarly a historical reference to 1066 67 might imply an event occurred during the winter of late 1066 and early 1067 35 whereas a reference to 1066 67 would cover the entirety of both years The usage was particularly common in British English during World War II where such slash dates were used for night bombing air raids It is also used by some police forces in the United States Numbering Edit The slash is used in numbering to note totals For example page 17 35 indicates that the relevant passage is on the 17th page of a 35 page document Similarly the marking 333 500 on a product indicates it is the 333rd out of 500 identical products or out of a batch of 500 such products For scores on schoolwork in games amp c 85 100 indicates 85 points were attained out of a possible 100 Slashes are also sometimes used to mark ranges in numbers that already include hyphens or dashes One example is the ISO treatment of dating Another is the US Air Force s treatment of aircraft serial numbers which are normally written to note the fiscal year and aircraft number For example 85 1000 notes the thousandth aircraft ordered in fiscal year 1985 To indicate the next fifty subsequent aircraft a slash is used in place of a hyphen or dash 85 1001 1050 Linguistic transcription Edit Main article International Phonetic Alphabet Brackets and transcription delimiters A pair of slashes as slants are used in the transcription of speech to enclose pronunciations i e phonetic transcriptions For example the IPA transcription of the English pronunciation of solidus is written ˈsɒlɪdes 6 Properly slashes mark broad or phonemic transcriptions whereas narrow allophonic transcriptions are enclosed by square brackets For example the word little may be broadly rendered as ˈlɪtel but a careful transcription of the velarization of the second L would be written ˈlɪɾɫ In sociolinguistics a double or triple slash may also be used in the transcription of a traditional sociolinguistic interview or in other type of linguistic elicitation to represent simultaneous speech interruptions and certain types of speech disfluencies Single and double slashes are often used as typographic substitutes for the click letters ǀ ǁ Poetry Edit The slash is used in various scansion notations for representing the metrical pattern of a line of verse typically to indicate a stressed syllable Line breaks Edit The slash as a virgule offset by spaces to either side is used to mark line breaks when transcribing text from a multi line format into a single line one 11 36 It is particularly common in quoting poetry song lyrics and dramatic scripts formats where omitting the line breaks risks losing meaningful context For example when quoting Hamlet s soliloquy To be or not to be that is the question Whether tis Nobler in the mind to suffer The Slings and Arrows of outrageous Fortune Or to take Arms against a Sea of troubles And by opposing end them 37 into a prose paragraph it is standard to mark the line breaks as To be or not to be that is the question Whether tis nobler in the mind to suffer The slings and arrows of outrageous Fortune Or to take arms against a sea of troubles And by opposing end them Less often virgules are used in marking paragraph breaks when quoting a prose passage Some style guides such as Hart s prefer to use a pipe in place of the slash to mark these line and paragraph breaks 11 The virgule may be thinner than a standard slash when typeset In computing contexts it may be necessary to use a non breaking space before the virgule to prevent it from being widowed on the next line Abbreviation Edit The slash has become standard in several abbreviations Generally it is used to mark two letter initialisms such as A C short for air conditioner w o without b w black and white or less often between w e whatever or less often weekend or week ending i o input output r w read write and n a not applicable Other initialisms employing the slash include w with and w r t with regard to Such slashed abbreviations are somewhat more common in British English and were more common around the Second World War as with S E to mean single engined The abbreviation 24 7 denoting 24 hours a day 7 days a week describes a business that is always open or unceasing activity 11 The slash in derived units such as m s meters per second is not an abbreviation slash but a straight division It is however in that position read as per rather than e g over which can be seen as analogous to units whose symbols are pure abbreviations such as mph miles per hour although in abbreviations per is p or dropped entirely psi pounds per square inch rather than a slash In the US government the names of offices within various departments are abbreviated using slashes starting with the larger office and following with its subdivisions For example the Federal Aviation Administration s Office of Commercial Space Transportation is formally abbreviated FAA AST Proofreading Edit The slash or vertical bar as a separatrix is used in proofreading to mark the end of margin notes b or to separate margin notes from one another The slash is also sometimes used in various proofreading initialisms such as l c and u c for changes to lower and upper case respectively Fiction Edit The slash is used in fan fiction to mark the romantic pairing a piece will focus upon e g a K S denoted a Star Trek story would focus on a sexual relationship between Kirk and Spock a usage which developed in the 1970s from the earlier friendship pairings marked by ampersands e g K amp S The genre as a whole is now known as slash fiction Because it is more generally associated with homosexual male relationships lesbian slash fiction is sometimes distinguished as femslash In situations where other pairings occur the genres may be distinguished as m m f f amp c Libraries Edit The slash is used under the Anglo American Cataloguing Rules to separate the title of a work from its statement of responsibility i e the listing of its author director amp c Like a line break this slash is surrounded by a single space on either side For example Gone with the Wind by Margaret Mitchell Star Trek II The Wrath of Khan videorecording Paramount Pictures The format is used in both card catalogs and online records Addresses Edit The slash is sometimes used as an abbreviation for building numbers For example in some contexts where 8 A Evergreen Gardens specifies Apartment 8 in Building A of the residential complex Evergreen Gardens In the United States however such an address refers to the first division of Apartment 8 and is simply a variant of Apartment 8A or 8 A Similarly in the United Kingdom an address such as 12 2 Anywhere Road means flat or apartment 2 in the building numbered 12 on Anywhere Road Music Edit Slashes are used in musical notation as an alternative to writing out specific notes where it is easier to read than traditional notation or where the player can improvise They are commonly used to indicate chords either in place of or in combination with traditional notation and for drummers as an indication to continue with the previously indicated style Sports Edit A slash is used to mark a spare knocking down all ten pins in two throws when scoring ten pin and duckpin bowling 39 Text messaging Edit In online messaging a slash might be used to imitate the formatting of a chat command e g writing fliptable as though there were such a command or the closing tags of languages such as HTML e g writing endrant to end an ironic diatribe or s to mark the preceding text as sarcastic A pair of slashes is sometimes used as a way to mark italic text where no special formatting is available e g italics citation needed As a letter Edit The Iraqw language of Tanzania uses the slash as a letter representing the voiced pharyngeal fricative as in ameeni woman 40 Spacing EditThere are usually no spaces either before or after a slash According to New Hart s Rules The Oxford Style Guide a slash is usually written without spacing on either side when it connects single words letters or symbols 11 Exceptions are in representing the start of a new line when quoting verse or a new paragraph when quoting prose The Chicago Manual of Style also allows spaces when either of the separated items is a compound that itself includes a space Our New Zealand Western Australia trip 41 Compare use of an en dash used to separate such compounds The Canadian Style A Guide to Writing and Editing prescribes No space before or after an oblique when used between individual words letters or symbols one space before and after the oblique when used between longer groups which contain internal spacing giving the examples n a and Language and Society Langue et societe 42 According to The Chicago Manual of Style when typesetting a URL or computer path line breaks should occur before a slash but not in the text between two slashes 43 Encoding Edit Though the slash is a reserved character prohibited in Windows file and folder names the big solidus is permitted first box above In this context it is very similar to the slash second box As a very common character the slash as slant was originally encoded in ASCII with the decimal code 47 or 0x2F 44 The same value was used in Unicode which calls it solidus and also adds some more characters U 002F SOLIDUS U 0337 COMBINING SHORT SOLIDUS OVERLAY U 0338 COMBINING LONG SOLIDUS OVERLAY U 2044 FRACTION SLASH U 2215 DIVISION SLASH U 2571 BOX DRAWINGS LIGHT DIAGONAL UPPER RIGHT TO LOWER LEFT U 29F8 BIG SOLIDUS U FF0F FULLWIDTH SOLIDUS fullwidth version of solidus U 1F67C VERY HEAVY SOLIDUSIn XML and HTML the slash can also be represented with the character entity amp sol or the numeric character reference amp 47 or amp x2F 45 Alternative names EditName Use casediagonal An uncommon name for the slash in all its uses 4 but particularly the less vertical fraction slash 46 division slash This is the Unicode Consortium s formal name for the variant of the slash used to mark division 47 U 2215 DIVISION SLASH forward slash A retronym used to distinguish slash from a backslash following the popularization of MS DOS and other Microsoft operating systems which use the backslash for paths in its file system 9 10 Less often forward stroke UK foreslash front slash and frontslash It is not unknown to even see such back formations as reverse backslash 48 fraction slash This is the Unicode Consortium s formal name for the low slash used to mark fractions 47 U 2044 FRACTION SLASH Also sometimes known as the fraction bar although this more commonly refers to the horizontal bar style as in 1 2 When used as a fraction bar this form of the mark is less vertical than an ASCII slash generally close to 45 and kerned on both sides 49 this use is distinguished by Unicode as the fraction slash 47 This use is sometimes mistakenly described as the sole meaning of solidus with its use as a shilling mark and slash distinguished under the name virgule 49 50 oblique A formerly common name for the slash in all its uses 4 Also oblique stroke 51 52 oblique dash amp c scratch comma A modern name for the virgule s historic use as a form of comma 53 separatrix Originally the vertical line separating integers from decimals before the advent of the decimal point later used for the vertical bar or slash used in proofreader s marginalia to denote the intended replacement for a letter or word struckthrough in proofed text 54 or to separate margin notes 55 Sometimes misapplied to virgules shilling mark A development of the long S ſ used as an abbreviation for the obsolete British shilling Latin solidus 5 The slash is known as a shilling stroke 23 slant From its shape an infrequent name except as slants in its use to mark pronunciations off from other text 56 and as the original ASCII name of the character 44 Also slant line s or bar s 9 slash mark An alternative name used to distinguish the punctuation mark from the word s other senses 57 slat An uncommon name for the slash used by the esoteric programming language INTERCAL 52 Also slak 52 solidus Another name for the mark derived from the Latin form of shilling also applied to other slashes separating numbers or letters 6 used in typography 49 and adopted by the ISO and Unicode 47 58 as their formal name for the ASCII slash slant U 002F SOLIDUS The solidus s use as a division sign is distinguished as the division slash 47 strike through The combining short or long solidus overlay is a diagonal strikethrough 47 U 0337 COMBINING SHORT SOLIDUS OVERLAY U 0338 COMBINING LONG SOLIDUS OVERLAY designed to produce results like A B C D e f g h i or A B C D e f g h i stroke A contraction of the phrase oblique stroke used in telegraphy 51 It is particularly employed in reading the mark out loud he stroke she is the common British reading of he she citation needed Slash has however become common in Britain in computing contexts while some North American amateur radio enthusiasts employ the British stroke Less frequently stroke is also used to refer to hyphens 9 virgule A development of virgula twig 2 the original medieval Latin name of the character when it was used as a period scratch comma 1 and caesura mark Now primarily used as the name of the slash when it is used to mark line breaks in quotations 2 Sometimes mistakenly distinguished as a formal name for the slash as against the solidus s supposed use as a fraction slash 49 50 Formerly sometimes anglicized in British sources as the virgil 3 The slash may also be read out as and or and or to or cum in some compounds separated by a slash over or out of in fractions division and numbering and per or a n in derived units as km h and prices as kg where the division slash stands for each 9 59 See also EditStrikethrough including slashes through figures Feynman slash notation in physics which employs slash like strikethroughs Inequality sign an equals sign with a slash like strikethroughNotes Edit Nevertheless the word was already being used in official publications such as the 1947 style guide of the US Department of Agriculture Forestry Service 8 For an example of this in practice see the section on proofreading marks in New Hart s Rules 38 References Edit a b virgula n Oxford English Dictionary 1st ed Oxford Oxford University Press 1917 a b c virgule n Oxford English Dictionary 1st ed Oxford Oxford University Press 1917 a b c d Partridge Eric 1953 The Virgule or Virgil or the Oblique You Have a Point There A Guide to Punctuation and Its Allies London Hamish Hamilton republished 2005 by Taylor amp Francis p 155 f ISBN 0 415 05075 8 archived from the original on 3 March 2016 a b c oblique adj n and adv Oxford English Dictionary 3rd ed Oxford Oxford University Press 2004 a b Bradley Henry 1914 shilling n In Murray James A H Sir ed Oxford English Dictionary Vol VIII 1st ed Oxford Oxford University Press p 697 1 An English money of account since the Norman Conquest of the value of 12 pence or 1 20 of a pound sterling Abbreviated s L solidus see SOLIDUS formerly also sh shil otherwise denoted by the sign after the numeral a b c solidus The Oxford English Dictionary Vol X sole sz 1913 p 401 via archive org 2 a sloping line used to separate shillings from pence A shilling mark Compare Slash n Webster s Third New International Dictionary 1961 with Slash n Webster s New American dictionary completely new and up to date 1947 Larson E vH 1947 Style Manual for publications US Department of Agriculture Forestry Service a b c d e f Hartman Jed 27 December 2011 A Slash by Any Other Name Neology archived from the original on 23 February 2016 retrieved 15 February 2016 a b c Turton Stuart 15 October 2009 Berners Lee web address slashes were a mistake PC Pro a b c d e f g h i 4 13 1 Solidus New Hart s Rules The Oxford Style Guide Oxford Oxford University Press 2014 archived from the original on 9 February 2016 retrieved 18 February 2016 a b The Chicago Manual of Style 16th ed Chicago University of Chicago Press 2016 6 104 Cunha et al 2001 Nova Gramatica do Portugues Contemporaneo 3rd ed in Portuguese Rio de Janeiro Nova Fronteira ISBN 85 209 1137 4 Colecao Numeros Polemicos PDF in Portuguese archived from the original PDF on 14 July 2011 retrieved 29 July 2012 Fernando de Souza Robson 27 February 2004 A proposta do Portugues com Inclusao de Genero Consciencia Efervescente in Portuguese retrieved 24 July 2012 Portuguese with Inclusion of Gender Curzan Anne 24 April 2013 Slash Not Just a Punctuation Mark Anymore Lingua Franca The Chronicle of Higher Education Archived from the original on 29 October 2013 YouTube video Back Like I Never Left Jourdan River Vacation House Hive Removal YouTube video Drone laying hive building up and getting new equipment at time 9 16 The Terror Duck Gastornis at time 5 30 a b Miller Jeff 22 December 2014 Fractions Earliest Uses of Various Mathematical Symbols archived from the original on 20 February 2016 retrieved 15 February 2016 Eckersley Richard et al 1994 Glossary of Typesetting Terms Chicago University of Chicago Press p 97 ISBN 0 226 18371 8 archived from the original on 12 April 2016 a b Eckersley Richard et al 1994 Glossary of Typesetting Terms Chicago University of Chicago Press p 93 ISBN 0 226 18371 8 archived from the original on 12 April 2016 Smith D E 1898 Rara Arithmetica Writing Systems and Punctuation General Punctuation Fraction Slash PDF The Unicode Standard ver 6 0 Unicode Consortium 2011 p 192 ISBN 978 1 936213 01 6 Number Forms PDF The Unicode Standard12 1 Unicode Consortium 2019 De Morgan 1845 The Calculus of Functions Encyclopaedia Metropolitana a b Fowler Francis George 1917 solidus The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Current English p 829 via archive org sǒ lidus n pl di Hist gold coin introduced by Roman Emperor Constantine only in abbr s shilling s as 7s 6d 1 1s the shilling line for ſ or long s as in 7 6 LL use of L SOLID us Ojima Fumita November 2004 Money in Shakespeare PDF Journal of Business Administration Tokyo Toyo University Press p 113 ISSN 0286 6439 OCLC 835683007 archived PDF from the original on 10 June 2014 retrieved 10 June 2014 See also Carolingian monetary system The Chicago Manual of Style 13th ed University of Chicago Press 1982 p 676 Scientific Style and Format The CBE Manual for Authors Editors and Publishers Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1994 p 65 Bibcode 1994ssfc book S Manuscripts and special Collections Money University of Nottingham retrieved 28 November 2021 Pandey Anshuman 7 October 2007 Proposal to Encode North Indic Number Forms in ISO IEC 10646 PDF University of Michigan p 8 archived PDF from the original on 9 May 2012 The Chicago Manual of Style 16th ed Chicago University of Chicago Press 2016 6 106 The Chicago Manual of Style 16th ed Chicago University of Chicago Press 2016 6 105 The Chicago Manual of Style 16th ed Chicago University of Chicago Press 2016 13 27 Shakespeare Hamlet Act III Scene ii Proofreading Marks PDF New Hart s Rules Scoring Duckpins archived from the original on 16 March 2015 Henry R T Muzale Josephat M Rugemalira Researching and Documenting the Languages of Tanzania 2008 Iraqi orthography includes two letters not used in writing Kiswa hili q for the voiceless uvular stop and x for the voiceless velar fricative It also uses symbols that are not even part of the Roman alphabet including a slash for the pharyngeal fricative and an apostrophe for the glottal stop Mous et al 2002 Punctuation FAQ Item CMOS 6 104 The Chicago Manual of Style Online Archived from the original on 21 March 2016 Retrieved 11 February 2020 Government of Canada Public Works and Government Services Canada 8 October 2009 7 02 Spacing 9 06 The Canadian Style TERMIUM Plus Translation Bureau www btb termiumplus gc ca Archived from the original on 8 November 2018 Retrieved 11 February 2020 The Chicago Manual of Style 16th ed Chicago University of Chicago Press 2016 7 42 a b Cerf Vint 16 October 1969 RFC20 ASCII format for Network Interchange Internet Engineering Task Force Character Codes HTML Codes Hexadecimal Codes amp HTML Names www character code com Archived from the original on 7 August 2016 Retrieved 7 August 2016 diagonal adj and n Oxford English Dictionary 1st ed Oxford Oxford University Press 1895 a b c d e f C0 Controls and Basic Latin PDF Unicode 2015 archived from the original on 25 September 2017 Regex Pattern to Delete a Pattern I Need for Forward Backslash and Reverse Backslash Experts Exchange 4 October 2012 archived from the original on 1 October 2014 retrieved 2 October 2014 a b c d Bringhurst Robert 2002 5 2 5 Use the Virgule with Words and Dates the Solidus with Split level Fractions The Elements of Typographic Style 3rd ed Point Roberts Hartley amp Marks pp 81 82 ISBN 978 0 88179 206 5 a b Klein Samuel John 3 March 2006 Typography Words of the Day Slashes Designorati retrieved 16 February 2016 a b stroke n Oxford English Dictionary 1st ed Oxford Oxford University Press 1919 a b c Howe Denis 1996 oblique stroke Free On Line Dictionary of Computing archived from the original on 29 July 2012 retrieved 24 July 2012 scratch n Oxford English Dictionary 1st ed Oxford Oxford University Press 1911 separatrix n Oxford English Dictionary 1st ed Oxford Oxford University Press 1912 separatrix Merriam Webster Online archived from the original on 22 September 2017 retrieved 11 February 2016 slant n Oxford English Dictionary 1st ed Oxford Oxford University Press 1911 Slash n Webster s Third New International Dictionary 1961 5 also slash mark DIAGONAL 4 Unicode 1 1 Composite Name List Unicode July 1995 archived from the original on 25 September 2017 slash The Punctuation Guide archived from the original on 12 February 2016 retrieved 11 February 2016 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Slash punctuation amp oldid 1140754534, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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