A backspace key

Backspace (← Backspace, ) is the keyboard key that in typewriters originally pushed the carriage one position backwards. In modern computer systems, it typically moves the display cursor one position backwards,[a] deletes the character at that position, and shifts back any text after[b] that position by one character.

Nomenclature

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An early typewriter with a backspacer[sic] key. (Blickensderfer Model 7)

Although the term "backspace" is the traditional name of the key which steps the carriage back and/or[c] deletes the previous character, the actual key may be labeled in a variety of ways—for example delete,[1] erase,[d] or with a left pointing arrow.[3] Some very early typewriters labeled this key the backspacer key. A dedicated symbol for "backspace" exists as U+232B ERASE TO THE LEFT but its use as a keyboard label is not universal.

Corona #3 typewriter. Note the oddly positioned backspace key, located off the keyboard, towards the back of the machine, on the right.

Backspace is distinct from the delete key, which in a teletypewriter would punch out all the holes in punched paper tape to strike out a character, and in modern computers deletes text at or following the cursor position. Also, the delete key often works as a generic command to remove an object (such as an image inside a document, or a file in a file manager), while backspace usually does not.[4][5] Full-size Mac keyboards have two keys labeled delete; a key that functions as a backspace key, and a key that functions as a delete key. Smaller Mac keyboards, such as laptop keyboards, have only a key that functions as a backspace key.[6] Full-size PC keyboards have a backspace key (in the main section) and two delete keys (in the extended area).

Combining characters

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With some typewriters,[e] a typist would, for example, type a lowercase letter A with acute accent (á) by typing a lowercase letter A, backspace, and then the acute accent key. This technique (also known as overstrike) is the basis for such spacing modifiers in computer character sets such as the ASCII caret (^, for the circumflex accent). Backspace composition no longer works with typical modern digital displays or typesetting systems.[f] It has to some degree been replaced with the combining diacritical marks mechanism of Unicode, though such characters do not work well with many computer fonts, and precomposed characters continue to be used. (Some software like TeX or Microsoft Windows use the opposite method to apply a diacritical mark, namely typing the accent first, and then the base letter to be accented.)

Use in computing

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Common use

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In modern systems, the backspace key is often mapped to the delete character (12710, 7f16, DEL in ASCII), although the backspace key's function of deleting the character before the cursor remains.[3] In computers, backspace can also delete a preceding newline character, something generally inapplicable to typewriters.

^H

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Pressing the backspace key on a computer terminal would generate code 0810, the ASCII control code BS (Backspace), which would delete the preceding character. That control code could also be accessed by pressing Control+H, as H is the eighth letter of the Latin alphabet. Terminals which did not have the backspace code mapped to the function of moving the cursor backwards and deleting the preceding character would display the symbols ^H (caret, H) when the backspace key was pressed. Even if a terminal did interpret backspace by deleting the preceding character, the system receiving the text might not. Then, the sender's screen would show a message without the supposedly deleted text, while that text, and the deletion codes, would be visible to the recipient. This sequence is still used humorously for epanorthosis by computer literates, denoting the deletion of a pretended blunder, much like a strikethrough; in this case, however, the ^H symbol is faked by typing a regular '^' followed by typing a regular 'H'.

Example:

Be nice to this fool^H^H^H^Hgentleman; he's visiting from corporate HQ.[7]

Notes

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  1. ^ The meaning of "backwards" depends on the direction of the text, and could get complicated in text involving several bidirectional categories.
  2. ^ "after" here implies on the same logical line of text
  3. ^ in some correcting typewriters it did both<
  4. ^ for example in One Laptop Per Child[2]
  5. ^ Many typewriters don't advance the carriage when an accent character is typed, thus no backspace is needed where the accent is typed ahead of the letter it is to be combined with. However, even with such machines, the backspace is still used to produce certain other characters, e.g. for combining "o" with "/" to make "ø".
  6. ^ There is no reason why a digital display or typesetting system could not be designed to allow backspace composition, a.k.a. overstrike, if an engineer chose to do that. As most contemporary computer display and typesetting systems are raster graphics-based rather than character-based (as of 2012), they make overstrike actually quite easy to implement. However, the use of proportional-width rather than fixed-width (monospaced) fonts makes the practical implementation of overstrike more complicated, and the original physical motivation for the technique is not present in digital computer systems.

References

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  1. ^ "User Mistakes or Mac Mistakes?, Backspace vs. Delete, and It's Too Easy to Zap an Icon in the Dock". 2007.
  2. ^ OLPC Wiki. "OLPC Human Interface Guidelines/The Sugar Interface/Input Systems". Archived from the original on 18 January 2008. Retrieved 2008-01-15.
  3. ^ a b "9.8 Keyboard configuration". Debian Policy Manual. Archived from the original on 2016-03-10. Retrieved 2007-07-24.
  4. ^ "Windows keyboard shortcuts overview". Microsoft. Retrieved 2016-02-09.
  5. ^ "Keyboard shortcuts for PCmanFM-QT [bug]/[Missing feature]". GitHub. Retrieved 2016-02-09.
  6. ^ Pogue, David. "Keyboard Differences". Switching to the Mac: The Missing Manual, Mavericks Edition.
  7. ^ Chapter 5. Hacker Writing Style, The Jargon File, version 4.4.7