Path: utzoo!utgpu!jarvis.csri.toronto.edu!mailrus!ames!ucsd!sdcsvax!ucsdhub!isg100!nusdhub!rwhite From: rwhite@nusdhub.UUCP (Robert C. White Jr.) Newsgroups: comp.lang.c Subject: Re: Pound sign (was Re: the Telephone Test) Message-ID: <1334@nusdhub.UUCP> Date: 5 May 89 17:59:05 GMT References: <147@ixi.UUCP> Organization: National University, San Diego Lines: 29 in article <147@ixi.UUCP>, clive@ixi.UUCP (Clive) says: [drawing deleted] > is a "number" sign or a "hash" sign. It is NOT repeat NOT a pound sign. > A pound sign is what appears on a five pound note, and looks like: [drawing deleted] > (or some more ornate version). How would you like it if I kept > saying: [stuff about curency deleted... incidently *we* use dollar sign all the time "$"...] Wrong-o! the "#" has a real name: octalthorpe it is also *correctly* called the "number sign" and "pound sign". Just because you (culutrally) have chosen to use a strange unit name for your currency dson't mean that every refrence to that unit refres to your curency. The symbol you inaccurately claim to mean "pound" is (more correctly) "pound sterling" or "british pound", there are less spesific uses of "pound" then the britsh (extraction?) currency [e.g. a ten pound bag of sugar, four pounds of this, 22000 punds of that]. Where ever units of weight (not spesifically related to currency) are being discussed in the "english" system [i think that is the real name] the symbol "#" MEANS POUND! Rob. (pet peves based on inaccuracy are just stoopid)