Path: utzoo!utgpu!jarvis.csri.toronto.edu!mailrus!tut.cis.ohio-state.edu!ucbvax!ucsd!nprdc!malloy From: malloy@nprdc.arpa (Sean Malloy) Newsgroups: comp.lang.c Subject: Re: Re: Pound sign (was Re: the Telephone Test) Message-ID: <1887@skinner.nprdc.arpa> Date: 9 May 89 14:20:59 GMT References: <30092@apple.Apple.COM> <4080002@hpopd.HP.COM> Reply-To: malloy@nprdc.arpa (Sean Malloy) Organization: Navy Personnel R&D Center, San Diego Lines: 26 In article <4080002@hpopd.HP.COM> apm@hpopd.HP.COM (Andrew Merritt) writes: >/ hpopd:comp.lang.c / desnoyer@Apple.COM (Peter Desnoyers) / 5:22 pm May 4, 1989 / >>The UK has now been metric long enough that some of its citizens have >>forgotten that there are two types of "pounds" - sterling and >>avoirdupois. >Not true: the pound weight is in common daily use in the UK. We just don't use >the octothorp character to denote it. The common denotation of a pound weight >is 'lb' as in 2lb for 2 pounds. I thought the octothorp meant 'number' in US >usage. The usage of '#' for 'pounds' stems from the early transaction-tape cash registers, which used adding machine internals for printing the register tape. The adding machine print hardware was only capable of printing the numeric digits and a limited selection of other characters -- add, subtract, multiply, divide, the '#' character to indicate a total. Because they needed a character to indicate pounds weight, and the '#' character wasn't being used for anything else, it was drafted into use as the 'pound character'. Other cash register manufacturers copied the usage, and it spread into common use. Sean Malloy | "The proton absorbs a photon Navy Personnel Research & Development Center | and emits two morons, a San Diego, CA 92152-6800 | lepton, a boson, and a malloy@nprdc.navy.mil | boson's mate. Why did I ever | take high-energy physics?"