1. Typesetter's question

Hello,

& This is an ampersand.

What's this @ ?

Don Cole

new topic     » topic index » view message » categorize

2. Re: Typesetter's question

It's an "at" sign.

new topic     » goto parent     » topic index » view message » categorize

3. Re: Typesetter's question

George Walters wrote:
> 
> It's an "at" sign.

There is a more formal name than that. I've heard it but don't remember it.

Don Cole

new topic     » goto parent     » topic index » view message » categorize

4. Re: Typesetter's question

This is the at or address sign. On the Internet,  @ is the symbol in e-mail
 addresses
that separates the name of the user from the name of the server that stores the
 users'
 e-mail messages.
In business,  formerly meant at or each. Three goblets @ 45 dollars, for
 example,
 meant each goblet costed 45 dollars. 
This sign was one of the standard characters on all typewriters' QWERTY
 keyboards for
a long time. You can see it on most old typewriters on the same key as number
 2.
The sign was chosen as one of the special characters in the ASCII set of
 characters
that became standard for computer keyboards, programs, and online message
 transmission.
In July, 1972, as the specifications for the file-transfer protocol were being
 written,
someone suggested including some e-mail programs written by Ray Tomlinson, an
 engineer
at Bolt Beranek and Newman, cheif contractor on ARPANET, the precursor of the
 Internet.
In their book, Where Wizards Stay Up Late, Katie Hafner and Matthew Lyon
 describe how
 the @-sign got there: 
"Tomlinson [...] became better known for a brilliant (he called it obvious)
 decision
he made while writing [the e-mail] software. He needed a way to separate the
 name of
the user from the machine the user was on. How should that be denoted? He
 wanted a
character that would not, under any circumstances, be found in the user's name.
 He
looked down at the keyboard he was using, a Model 33 Teletype, which almost
 everyone
else on the Net used, too. In addition to the letters and numerals there were
 about a
dozen punctuation marks. `I got there first, so I got to choose any punctuation
 I wanted',
Tomlinson said. `I chose the @-sign.' The character also had the advantage of
 meaning
`at' the designated institution. He had no idea he was creating an icon for the
 wired
 world." 
Thus, the @-sign is not a new invention. Some researchers even believe it was
 used as
early as in the sixth or seventh century, probably as a ligature (combination)
 of the
 two letters a and d for Latin ad, meaning to. 
The @-sign has different names in different languages: In England it is called
 at-sign
or commercial at, in Germany Klammeraffe (hanging monkey), in France arobas or
 petit
escargot (small snail), in Spain arroba (an entity for weight) and in Italy
 chiocciolina
 (small snail). 


Take care,
Al

And, good luck with your Euphoria programming!

My bumper sticker: "I brake for LED's"

 From "Black Knight":
"I can live with losing the good fight,
 but i can not live without fighting it".
"Well on second thought, maybe not."

new topic     » goto parent     » topic index » view message » categorize

5. Re: Typesetter's question

don cole wrote:
> 
> 
> posted by: don cole <doncole at pacbell.net>
> 
> George Walters wrote:
> 
>>It's an "at" sign.
> 
> 
> There is a more formal name than that. I've heard it but don't remember it.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/@

here in Czech, we call it "zavinac", this means "rolled pickled herring"

	Martin Stachon

new topic     » goto parent     » topic index » view message » categorize

6. Re: Typesetter's question

Al Getz wrote:

[snipped the very interesting info]

>  The @-sign has different names in different languages:
>  In England it is called  at-sign or commercial at,
>  in Germany Klammeraffe (hanging monkey), in France arobas
>  or petit escargot (small snail), in Spain arroba
>  (an entity for weight) and in Italy chiocciolina
>  (small snail). 

In the Unicode tables, the '@' sign has the official
name - COMMERCIAL AT.

In other words  '&' = English 'and',  '@' = English 'at'

In Russia, this sign is widely known as 'sobaka' - 'dog' in English,
but you can meet it as 'obezjana' - 'monkey', or 'kljushka' - 'club',
'ice-hockey stick'.

But the official Russian name of that dog is something like to
'commercial sign', and direct translation is just 'na' = 'at' = '@',
same as Russian 'i' = 'and' = '&'.

Regards,
Igor Kachan
kinz at peterlink.ru

new topic     » goto parent     » topic index » view message » categorize

7. Re: Typesetter's question

don cole wrote:
> 
> Hello,
> 
> & This is an ampersand.
> 
> What's this @ ?
> 

Don:

commercal at sign

In commerce it was used to represent 'AT THE COST OF'

Bernie

My files in archive:
WMOTOR, XMOTOR, W32ENGIN, MIXEDLIB, EU_ENGIN, WIN32ERU, WIN32API 

Can be downloaded here:
http://www.rapideuphoria.com/cgi-bin/asearch.exu?dos=on&win=on&lnx=on&gen=on&keywords=bernie+ryan

new topic     » goto parent     » topic index » view message » categorize

8. Re: Typesetter's question

Hello everyone, 

Thank you for your responses.

I guess typesetters just call it the at.

Like, hand me an at please.

I thought there was a long word for it , but I guess not.

I know what it means and is used for.

Don Cole

new topic     » goto parent     » topic index » view message » categorize

9. Re: Typesetter's question

don cole wrote:
> 
> Hello everyone, 
> 
> Thank you for your responses.
> 
> I guess typesetters just call it the at.
> 
> Like, hand me an at please.

Here ya go: @ :)

> I thought there was a long word for it , but I guess not.

I thought there was a name for it too (besides "at") so I'm glad you asked.

> I know what it means and is used for.
> 
> Don Cole

new topic     » goto parent     » topic index » view message » categorize

10. Re: Typesetter's question

> 
> I thought there was a long word for it , but I guess not.
> 

I see from the text that Al pasted (I guess you didn't write that from
what you know, Al? Wikipedia, or something, right? :P) some mistakes the @ for
ampersand. Could that be the word you where looking for, Don?

Kenneth aka ZNorQ

new topic     » goto parent     » topic index » view message » categorize

11. Re: Typesetter's question

ZNorQ wrote:
> 
> 
> > I thought there was a long word for it , but I guess not.
> > 
> 
> I see from the text that Al pasted (I guess you didn't write that from
> what you know, Al? Wikipedia, or something, right? :P) some mistakes the @ for
> ampersand. Could that be the word you where looking for, Don?
> 
> Kenneth aka ZNorQ

Hi Kenneth,


I found that information at Symbols.com, where they have a lot
of stuff on all kinds of symbols.  Many i've never heard of
before.


Take care,
Al

And, good luck with your Euphoria programming!

My bumper sticker: "I brake for LED's"

 From "Black Knight":
"I can live with losing the good fight,
 but i can not live without fighting it".
"Well on second thought, maybe not."

new topic     » goto parent     » topic index » view message » categorize

Search



Quick Links

User menu

Not signed in.

Misc Menu