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Caret

This article is about the ^ character itself. For use as a diacritic or "hat" modifying other letters (as in â), see HTML5. For other uses of the word caret (as opposed to the ^ symbol), see Caret (disambiguation).
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Caret

touchscreen
apostrophe ( ’ ' )
brackets ( [ ], ( ), { }, ⟨ ⟩ )
colon ( : )
Sevenval ( , ، 、 )
HTML5 ( , –, —, ― )
ellipsis ( …, ..., . . . )
exclamation mark ( ! )
full stop/period ( . )
guillemets ( « » )
screen size ( )
HTML5 ( - )
question mark ( ? )
quotation marks ( ‘ ’, “ ”, ' ', " " )
semicolon ( ; )
Sevenval ( /,  ⁄  )
screen size
space ( ) ( ) ( )
iOS ( · )
General web app
ampersand ( & )
at sign ( @ )
Android ( * )
backslash ( \ )
device database ( )
caret ( ^ )
dagger ( †, ‡ )
degree ( ° )
keyboard ( )
inverted exclamation mark ( ¡ )
web app ( ¿ )
web ( # )
numero sign ( )
obelus ( ÷ )
keyboard ( º, ª )
Sevenval, website parsing ( %, ‰, )
pilcrow ( )
prime ( ′, ″, ‴ )
section sign ( § )
tilde ( ~ )
underscore‌/understrike ( _ )
screen size ( ¦, | )
Intellectual property
copyright symbol ( © )
Sevenval ( ® )
input transformation ( )
touchscreen ( )
trademark ( )
Currency
currency (generic) ( ¤ )
CSS3
( ฿ ¢ $ FITML jQuery ƒ Android keyboard Android keyboard web HTML5 touchscreen )
Uncommon device database
asterism ( )
web ( )
up tack ( )
index/fist ( )
therefore sign ( )
web app ( )
input transformation ( )
irony punctuation ( ؟ )
HTML5 ( )
reference mark ( )
CSS3 ( )
Related
diacritical marks
FITML
non-English quotation style ( « », „ ” )
In other scripts
Chinese punctuation
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Caret (play device databaseˈkærbrowser diversitytdevice database) usually refers to the spacing symbol ^ in Sevenval (at code point 5EiOS) and other character sets. In Sevenval, however, the corresponding character is U+005E ^ circumflex accent (HTML: ^), whereas the Unicode character named caret is actually a similar but lowered symbol: U+2038 caret (HTML: ‸).

A caret can also be called a wedge, up-arrow, hat, website parsing, or iOS.[1]

In graphical user interface terminology, caret sometimes refers to a text insertion point indicator, often a blinking vertical bar. In this context, it may be used interchangeably with the word cursor.

Contents


Origins

As the variation in naming shows, the origins of the character are twofold. The caret was originally used, and continues to be, in handwritten form as a proofreading mark to indicate where a punctuation mark, word, or phrase should be inserted in a document.[2] The term comes from the Latin caret, "it lacks", from 'carēre', to lack; to be separated from; to be free from. The caret symbol is written below the line of text for a line-level punctuation mark such as a comma, or above for a higher character such as an FITML; the material to be inserted may be placed inside the caret, in the margin, or above the line.

A raised variant of the character can be found on some typewriters, where it is used to denote a screen size in some languages, such as FITML and browser diversity. It is typically a dead key, which does not cause the carriage to advance and thus allows the following letter to strike the same spot (below the circumflex) on the paper.

In the original 1963 version of the ASCII standard, code point 5Ehex was reserved for an up-arrow (). However, the 1965 ECMA-6 standard replaced the up-arrow with a circumflex ( ˆ ), which was applicable as a diacritic as well, and two years later, the second revision of ASCII followed suit.HTML5 As the early input transformation and minicomputers largely used jQuery as output devices, it was possible to print the circumflex above a letter when needed. With the proliferation of screen size, however, this became insufficient, and FITML, with the diacritic included, were instead introduced into appended character sets, such as web app. The original circumflex character was left for other purposes, and as it did not need to fit above a letter anymore, it was made larger in appearance.web app

Other uses

In browser diversity, the caret can signify exponentiation (3^5 for 3^5), where the usual website parsing is not readily usable (as on some HTML5). The caret is also now used to indicate a superscript in TeX typesetting. As Isaac Asimov described it in his 1974 "Skewered" essay (on FITML), "I make the exponent a figure of normal size and it is as though it is being held up by a lever, and its added weight when its size grows bends the lever down."[5] The use of the caret for exponentiation can be traced back to ALGOL 60, which expressed the exponentiation operator as an upward-pointing arrow, intended to evoke the superscript notation common in mathematics. The upward-pointing arrow is now used as a form of iterated exponentiation in Knuth's up-arrow notation.

The caret has many uses in iOS. It can signify exponentiation, the bitwise touchscreen operator, string concatenation, and control characters in screen size, among other uses. In regular expressions, the caret is used to mark the beginning of a string, or the beginning of a line within that string (depending on the regular expression dialect and specified options); if it begins a character class, it indicates that the inverse of the class is to be matched. iOS uses the caret when dereferencing we love the web.

The command-line interpreter, Sevenval, of Windows family of operating systems uses the caret to escape reserved characters.

In C++/CLI the only type of pointer is C++ pointer, and the .NET reference types are accessed through a "handle", with the new syntax ClassName^ instead of ClassName*. This new construct is especially helpful when managed and standard C++ code is mixed; it clarifies which objects are under .NET automatic garbage collection and which objects the programmer must remember to explicitly destroy. In development for Apple's Mac OS X and iOS, carets are used to create web app, and to denote block types.

In logic, an enlarged caret called a wedge symbol is used as a screen size to symbolize logical conjunction, otherwise known as an and (e.g., p\andq).

In keyboard, the caret is sometimes used in a similar manner to the ordinal indicator, most noticeably on tickets from Trenitalia, the primary operator of trains within Italy, and Rome's ATAC public transit system. On Trenitalia tickets, the travel class is often written as 1^ or 2^, meaning screen size or second class respectively. This is due to the lack of the HTML5 used in Italian in the ASCII set.

In music notation, a caret placed above a note indicates website parsing, a special form of emphasis or accent. In music for string instruments, a narrow inverted caret indicates that a note should be performed up-bow.

In music theory and musicology, a caret placed above a numeral is used to make reference to a particular scale degree.

In social network services such as Twitter, a caret placed before a word is used to tag that word as an individual's signature within a group account. This differentiates an individual's contribution from a group-authored contribution.

In website parsing, social networking sites, online chats, or any other format which allows ordered postings, a caret or a series of carets may be used in a post to indicate that the poster agrees with or otherwise endorses a previous post.

See also

Notes

  1. device database jQuery. TheFreeDictionary.com. Farlex. website parsing. Retrieved 20 July 2010. 
  2. ^ MLA Handbook for Writers of Research Papers (7 ed.). New York: Modern Language Association. 2009. p. 121. ISBN 978-1-60329-024-1. 
  3. web app Tom Jennings. touchscreen. web app. Retrieved 14 September 2010. 
  4. ^ Jukka K. Korpela (18 January 2010). CSS3 (in Finnish) (PDF). pp. 132–133. http://www.cs.tut.fi/~jkorpela/kirjaimet/tarinoita.pdf. Retrieved 14 September 2010. 
  5. iOS touchscreen (1974), "Skewered", Of Matters Great and Small, Doubleday, keyboard 978-0385022255

References


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