On Fri, Jul 8, 2016, at 10:52, Clem Cole wrote:
I can not speak for anyone else. But at the time
when I was a part
of the /usr/group UNIX standards** mtgs I personally do not believe I
had ever heard of the term "solidus." Such a term maybe had been used
in my first form Latin classes from the 1960s, but by the 1980s I had
long ago forgotten any/all of my Latin. I certainly did not try to
remember it as a computer professional.
In those days many of us, including me, did (and still do) refer to
the asterisk as "splat" and the exclamation point as "bang" from
the
sound made by them when they printed yellow oiled paper @ 10 cps from
the console TTY. But slash was what we called the character that is
now next to the shift key on modern keyboards. I do not remember
ever using, much less needed to refer to, the character "back slash"
until the unfortunate crap that the folks in Redmond forced on the
industry.
You never had to use it for escaping in C/Regex/Troff/etc?
Although interestingly enough, the vertical bar or
UNIX "pipe" symbol
was used and discussed freely in those days. I find it interesting
that Redmond-ism became the unshifted character, not the vertical bar
by the shear force of economics of the PC.
ASCII keyboards had \ unshifted long before the PC. The ASR-33 didn't
have it (it didn't have pipe at all - backslash was on shift-L), but
every DEC keyboard I can find did, as did the ADM-3a, and incidentally
the Symbolics Lisp Machine's keyboard.
I had suspected the reason that [\] ended up as the unshifted characters
is because {|} were not available on uppercase-only keyboards, but I
can't find any uppercase terminals that had separate keys for them (the
ASR-33 had them on shift- KLM). I expect that's also why ^, on shift-N,
was used for pipes rather than the vertical bar in the earliest versions
of Unix that had them.
What terminals did you use, back in those days?
(Incidentally, I can find *literally no* pictures of a Teletype 37,
and no sufficiently high-quality closeups of a 38 to determine its
keyboard layout)