Quizzes & Puzzles2 mins ago
Hyphens on keyboard
The penultimate key on the top row contains a hyphen and in upper case a dash which shows up lower and longer than the hyphen, what is the purpose of this symbol please? It cannot be used to underline anything or can it? and the only time I see it used is in email addresses.
I've just been asked this question and I'm damned if I know the answer.
I've just been asked this question and I'm damned if I know the answer.
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by Khandro. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.This may be of interest.
It was used for underlining in the days of typewriters but you had to move the carriage back, I recall.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Underscore
It was used for underlining in the days of typewriters but you had to move the carriage back, I recall.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Underscore
It's an underscore and in the days of typewriters it was used to underline things, you typed your word and then backspaced and typed the underscore under each letter. In post typewiter days some programming languages use it to break up the name of a procedure as you can't have spaces and user_update_account is easier to read than userupdateaccount
Hi Khandro
Highlight then Ctrl-U behaves exactly the same as Highlight then Menu then Font then Underline then OK, i.e. if you then put your cursor precisely at the end of the underlined text and carry on typing, whatever you type will be underlined. It isn't because you used Ctrl-U - that's the way underline works however you underline.
However, if you type Ctrl-U again before you start typing (but after you've deselected the highlighted text) then whatever you type won't be underlined. Ctrl-U switched back and forth between Underline and Non-Underline mode. Likewise for Ctrl-B (bold) and Ctrl-I (italic).
Highlight then Ctrl-U behaves exactly the same as Highlight then Menu then Font then Underline then OK, i.e. if you then put your cursor precisely at the end of the underlined text and carry on typing, whatever you type will be underlined. It isn't because you used Ctrl-U - that's the way underline works however you underline.
However, if you type Ctrl-U again before you start typing (but after you've deselected the highlighted text) then whatever you type won't be underlined. Ctrl-U switched back and forth between Underline and Non-Underline mode. Likewise for Ctrl-B (bold) and Ctrl-I (italic).