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* help: character to integer
@ 1996-10-01  0:00 Eric Anthony Spear
  1996-10-02  0:00 ` Dave Marshall
                   ` (2 more replies)
  0 siblings, 3 replies; 27+ messages in thread
From: Eric Anthony Spear @ 1996-10-01  0:00 UTC (permalink / raw)



I've tried to find the answer in the RM, but I haven't had any luck.

Is there a function, either in a package or as an attribute, that can work
like this BASIC function:

i = ASC("X")

That is, the function returns the ASCII value of the given character.

Thanks in advance for any help.





^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 27+ messages in thread
* Re: the term "pound sign" (was: help: character to integer)
@ 1996-10-15  0:00 W. Wesley Groleau (Wes)
  1996-10-16  0:00 ` Robert Dewar
  1996-10-18  0:00 ` Andrew Lynch
  0 siblings, 2 replies; 27+ messages in thread
From: W. Wesley Groleau (Wes) @ 1996-10-15  0:00 UTC (permalink / raw)



In a 1957 reprint of an even older edition of a dictionary that my wife and
I own, there is a section on symbols, divided by application domain.

In the "Commerce and Business" section, # is listed as meaning "pounds" when
it occurs after a number.

My mother (born 1933) and grandmother (1908) both had secretarial training,
both know nothing about computers, and both pronounced " 25# " as
"twenty-five pounds" even before I knew anything about computers.

The representation for '#' differs from '3' by one bit.
(BEGIN OPINION MODE)
I suspect this has something to do with the fact that typewriters for several
decades have had '#' as the shifted form of '3'.
(END OPINION MODE)

Do antique U.K typewriters have the pound stirling symbol above the three?
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
W. Wesley Groleau (Wes)    wwgrol    x4923    MS 10-40    10C2C6    AFATDS IG
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------




^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 27+ messages in thread
* Re: the term "pound sign" (was: help: character to integer)
@ 1996-10-17  0:00 John Walker
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 27+ messages in thread
From: John Walker @ 1996-10-17  0:00 UTC (permalink / raw)



On Wed, 16 Oct 1996 09:04:44 -0400,
Robert Dewar <dewar@MERV.CS.NYU.EDU> wrote:

>Well I must say that at first it seemed quite credible that this was indeed
>an old term, but the failure of anyone to come up with other than the most
>dubious scraps of anecdotal evidence is puzzling ...

Don't nobody got no symbol dictionaries? :)

*Moi*'s memory leans vaguely to the (#=pound)=old side, but I wonder
whether the usage was blue-collar: stock clerks rather than
bookkeepers.  One tilt in the (#=pound)=new direction is that the 1909
Webster's shows # as only the number sign.  Class bias? :)

But c'mon, somebody gotta got a symbol dictionary!

take care,

John
            ---------------------------------------------------
                    walkerj@sw-eng.falls-church.va.us
                   Assembler is a high-level language.
    .GET DSCLAIMR.STD   ; and ponder the implications of insertion points
            ---------------------------------------------------




^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 27+ messages in thread
* Re: the term "pound sign" (was: help: character to integer)
@ 1996-10-17  0:00 W. Wesley Groleau (Wes)
  1996-10-18  0:00 ` Robert Dewar
                   ` (2 more replies)
  0 siblings, 3 replies; 27+ messages in thread
From: W. Wesley Groleau (Wes) @ 1996-10-17  0:00 UTC (permalink / raw)



:> Well I must say that at first it seemed quite credible that this was indeed
:> an old term, but the failure of anyone to come up with other than the most
:> dubious scraps of anecdotal evidence is puzzling ...

So: Feldman's claim that physics teachers used '#' for "pounds" around 1960
is a dubious scrap of anecdotal evidence.

And: Webster's claim made in 1957 that '#' was used for "pounds" in commerce
and business is a dubious scrap of anecdotal evidence.

And: my claim that at least one non-computer-literate secretary used '#'
for "pounds" before 1950 is a dubious scrap of anecdotal evidence.

Now: How do we describe the claim the started this silly argument, to wit:

 >. . . But for example, the symbol for 16#23# which is # in
 >the US version, is the pound stirling symbol in the UK (this is why # on
 >a US touch tone phone is called the pound key).

I suspect "this is why" was merely a case of inadvertent inaccuracy.
(Let he who is without sin...)
But even if he meant it, is it worth a big fight?

I predict that if someone with a better newsreader than I :-) were to put
this question on alt.english.usage the result would be
a hundred dubious scraps of anecdotal evidence, two hundred useless
opinions, and at least ten conclusive quotes from hundred-year-old
dictionaries.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------
W. Wesley Groleau (Wes)                                Office: 219-429-4923
Hughes Defense Communications (MS 10-40)                 Home: 219-471-7206
Fort Wayne,  IN   46808                  (Unix): wwgrol@pseserv3.fw.hac.com
---------------------------------------------------------------------------




^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 27+ messages in thread

end of thread, other threads:[~1996-10-27  0:00 UTC | newest]

Thread overview: 27+ messages (download: mbox.gz / follow: Atom feed)
-- links below jump to the message on this page --
1996-10-01  0:00 help: character to integer Eric Anthony Spear
1996-10-02  0:00 ` Dave Marshall
1996-10-02  0:00 ` Richard A. O'Keefe
1996-10-02  0:00   ` George Haddad
1996-10-02  0:00     ` Robert A Duff
1996-10-02  0:00     ` David C. Hoos, Sr.
1996-10-05  0:00     ` Robert Dewar
1996-10-07  0:00       ` the term "pound sign" (was: help: character to integer) Adam Beneschan
1996-10-09  0:00         ` Michael Feldman
1996-10-09  0:00           ` Robert Dewar
1996-10-09  0:00             ` Michael Feldman
1996-10-10  0:00             ` Richard Kenner
1996-10-10  0:00               ` Adam Beneschan
1996-10-11  0:00           ` Robert I. Eachus
1996-10-11  0:00             ` Robert Dewar
1996-10-07  0:00 ` help: character to integer Paul Tongue
  -- strict thread matches above, loose matches on Subject: below --
1996-10-15  0:00 the term "pound sign" (was: help: character to integer) W. Wesley Groleau (Wes)
1996-10-16  0:00 ` Robert Dewar
1996-10-17  0:00   ` Robert A Duff
1996-10-18  0:00 ` Andrew Lynch
1996-10-23  0:00   ` Richard A. O'Keefe
1996-10-27  0:00     ` @@           robin
1996-10-17  0:00 John Walker
1996-10-17  0:00 W. Wesley Groleau (Wes)
1996-10-18  0:00 ` Robert Dewar
1996-10-18  0:00 ` Robert Dewar
1996-10-18  0:00 ` Sandy McPherson

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