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Slash (punctuation)
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| / | |
|---|---|
Slash or solidus | |
| In Unicode | U+002F / SOLIDUS (/) |
| Related | |
| See also | U+005C \ REVERSE SOLIDUS |
The slash is a slanting line punctuation mark /. It is also known as a stroke, a solidus, a forward slash and several other historical or technical names. Once used as the equivalent of the modern period and comma, the slash is now used to represent division and fractions, as a date separator, in between multiple alternative or related terms, and to indicate abbreviation.
History
[edit]Slashes may be found in early writing as a variant form of dashes, vertical strokes, etc. The present use of a slash distinguished from such other marks derives from the medieval European virgule (Latin: virgula, lit. "twig"), which was used as a full stop (also known as a period), scratch comma, and caesura mark.[1] (The first sense was eventually lost to the low dot and the other two developed separately into the comma , and caesura mark ||) Its use as a comma became especially widespread in France, where it was also used to mark the continuation of a word onto the next line of a page, a sense later taken on by the hyphen -.[2] The Fraktur script used throughout Central Europe in the early modern period used a single slash as a scratch comma and a double slash // as a dash. The double slash developed into the double oblique hyphen ⸗ and double hyphen ⹀ before being usually simplified into various single dashes.
In the 18th century, the mark was generally known in English as the "oblique".[3] but particularly the less vertical fraction slash.[4] The variant "oblique stroke" was increasingly shortened to "stroke", which became the common British name for the character, although printers and publishing professionals often instead referred to it as an "oblique". In the 19th and early 20th century, it was also widely known as the "shilling mark" or "solidus", from its use as a notation or abbreviation for the shilling.[5][6] The name "slash" is a recent development, not appearing in Webster's Dictionary until the Third Edition (1961)[7][a] but has gained wide currency through its use in computing, a context where it is sometimes used in British English in preference to "stroke". Clarifying terms such as "forward slash" have been coined owing to widespread use of Microsoft's DOS and Windows operating systems, which use the backslash extensively.[9][10]
Usage
[edit]Disjunction and conjunction
[edit]Connecting alternatives
[edit]The slash is commonly used in many languages as a shorter substitute for the conjunction "or", typically with the sense of exclusive or (e.g., Y/N permits yes or no but not both).[11] Its use in this sense is somewhat informal,[12] although it is used in philology to note variants (e.g., virgula/uirgula) and etymologies (e.g., F. virgule/LL. virgula/L. virga/PIE. *wirgā).[2]
Such slashes may be used to avoid taking a position in naming disputes. One example is the Assyrian naming dispute, which prompted the US and Swedish censuses to use the respective official designations "Assyrian/Chaldean/Syriac" and "Assyrier/Syrianer" for the ethnic group.
In particular, since the late 20th century, the slash is used to permit more gender-neutral language in place of the traditional masculine or plural gender neutrals. In the case of English, this is usually restricted to degendered pronouns such as "he/she" or "s/he". Most other Indo-European languages include more far-reaching use of grammatical gender. In these, the separate gendered desinences (grammatical suffices) of the words may be given divided by slashes or set off with parentheses. For example, in Spanish, hijo is a son and a hija is a daughter; some proponents of gender-neutral language advocate the use of hijo/a, hijo(a) or hija/hijo when writing for a general audience or addressing a listener of unknown gender.[13][14][15] Less commonly, at sign ⟨@⟩ is used instead: hij@. Similarly, in German and some Scandinavian and Baltic languages, Sekretär refers to any secretary and Sekretärin to an explicitly female secretary; some advocates of gender neutrality support forms such as Sekretär/-in for general use. This does not always work smoothly, however: problems arise in the case of words like Arzt ('doctor') where the explicitly female form Ärztin is umlauted and words like Chinese ('Chinese person') where the explicitly female form Chinesin loses the terminal -e.
Although not as common as brackets, slashes can also be used for words the author do not know is plural or singular such as "child/ren", "is/are", "book/s", "answer/s" or "fix/es".
Connecting non-contrasting items
[edit]The slash is also used as a shorter substitute for the conjunction "and" or inclusive or (i.e., A or B or both),[12] typically in situations where it fills the role of a hyphen or en dash. For example, the "Hemingway/Faulkner generation" might be used to discuss the era of the Lost Generation inclusive of the people around and affected by both Hemingway and Faulkner. This use is sometimes proscribed, as by New Hart's Rules, the style guide for the Oxford University Press.[11]
Presenting routes
[edit]The slash, as a form of inclusive or, is also used to punctuate the stages of a route (e.g., Shanghai/Nanjing/Wuhan/Chongqing as stops on a tour of the Yangtze).[2]
Introducing topic shifts
[edit]The word slash is also developing as a way to introduce topic shifts or follow-up statements. Slash can introduce a follow-up statement, such as, "I really love that hot dog place on Liberty Street. Slash can we go there tomorrow?" It can also indicate a shift to an unrelated topic, as in "JUST SAW ALEX! Slash I just chubbed on oatmeal raisin cookies at north quad and i miss you." The new usage of "slash" appears most frequently in spoken conversation, though it can also appear in writing.[16]
In speech
[edit]Sometimes the word slash is used in speech as a conjunction to represent the written role of the character (as if a written slash were being read aloud from text), e.g. "bee slash mosquito protection" for a beekeeper's net hood,[17] and "There's a little bit of nectar slash honey over here, but really it's not a lot." (said by a beekeeper examining in a beehive),[18] and "Gastornis slash Diatryma" for two supposed genera of prehistoric birds which are now thought to be one genus.[19]
Mathematics
[edit]Fractions
[edit]The slash is used between two numbers to indicate a fraction or ratio. Such formatting developed as a way to write the horizontal fraction bar on a single line of text. It is first attested in England and Mexico in the 18th century.[20] This notation is known as an online, solidus,[21] or shilling fraction.[21] Nowadays fractions, unlike inline division, are often given using smaller numbers, superscript, and subscript (e.g., 23/43). This notation is responsible for the current form of the percent %, permille ‰, and permyriad ‱ signs, developed from the horizontal form 0/0 which represented an early modern corruption of an Italian abbreviation of per cento.[22]
This notation can also be used when the concept of fractions is extended from numbers to arbitrary rings by the method of localization of a ring.
Division
[edit]The division slash ∕ is used between two numbers to indicate division.[b] This use developed from the fraction slash in the late 18th or early 19th century.[20] The formatting was advocated by De Morgan in the mid-19th century.[24][full citation needed],[25] who wrote:
- The occurrence of fractions, such as a/b, a+b/c+d, in the verbal part of mathematical works is a source of considerable loss of room, and creates an inelegant and even confused appearance in the printed page. It is very desirable, in every point of view, except the strictly mathematical one, that some method of representation should be adopted which does not require a larger space than is usual between two successive lines. At the same time, it is by no means of very great importance that the verbal part should entirely coincide with the mathematical part in notation, so long as the latter remains to preserve the usual conventions. The symbol ÷ has been disused for a sufficient reason, namely, the number of times which the pen must be taken off to form it. This has been, and we imagine always will be, the cause either of abandonment or abbreviation. The question is, whether a new and easy notation could not be substituted; and it is desirable that it should be derived from analogy, such as (accidentally, we believe) does exist in >, =, and <. If we look at × and +, and observe that the first is made by turning the second through half a right angle, denoting multiplication, which is primarily an extension of addition in like manner as division is an extension of subtraction, we may thus invent the symbol / or \ to denote division, which is also the symbol of subtraction turned through half a right angle. If a/b were used to denote a divided by b, and (a+b)/(c+d) to denote a + b divided by c + d, all necessity for increased spacing would be avoided; but this alteration should not be introduced into completely mathematical expressions, though it would be convenient in particular cases.[25]
Quotient of set
[edit]A quotient of a set is informally a new set obtained by identifying some elements of the original set. This is denoted as a fraction (sometimes even as a built fraction), where the numerator is the original set (often equipped with some algebraic structure). What is appropriate as denominator depends on the context.
In the most general case, the denominator is an equivalence relation on the original set , and elements are to be identified in the quotient if they are equivalent according to ; this is technically achieved by making the set of all equivalence classes of .
In group theory, the slash is used to mark quotient groups. The general form is , where is the original group and is the normal subgroup; this is read " mod ", where "mod" is short for "modulo". Formally this is a special case of quotient by an equivalence relation, where iff for some . Since many algebraic structures (rings, vector spaces, etc.) in particular are groups, the same style of quotients extend also to these, although the denominator may need to satisfy additional closure properties for the quotient to preserve the full algebraic structure of the original (e.g. for the quotient of a ring to be a ring, the denominator must be an ideal).
When the original set is the set of integers , the denominator may alternatively be just an integer: . This is an alternative notation for the set of integers modulo n (needed because is also notation for the very different ring of n-adic integers). is an abbreviation of or , which both are ways of writing the set in question as a quotient of groups.
Combining slash
[edit]Slashes may also be used as a combining character in mathematical formulae. The most important use of this is that combining a slash with a relation negates it, producing e.g. 'not equal' as negation of or 'not in' as negation of ; these slashed relation symbols are always implicitly defined in terms of the non-slashed base symbol. The graphical form of the negation slash is mostly the same as for a division slash, except in some cases where that would look odd; the negation of (divides) and negation of (various meanings) customarily both have their negations slashes less steep and in particular shorter than the usual one.
The Feynman slash notation is an unrelated use of combining slashes, mostly seen in quantum field theory. This kind of combining slash takes a vector base symbol and converts it to a matrix quantity. Technically this notation is a shorthand for contracting the vector with the Dirac gamma matrices, so ; what one gains is not only a more compact formula, but also not having to allocate a letter as the contracted index.
Computing
[edit]The slash, sometimes distinguished as "forward slash", is used in computing in a number of ways, primarily as a separator among levels in a given hierarchy, for example in the path of a filesystem.
File paths
[edit]The slash is used as the path component separator in many computer operating systems (e.g., Unix's pictures/image.png). In Unix and Unix-like systems, such as macOS and Linux, the slash is also used for the volume root directory (e.g., the initial slash in /usr/john/pictures). Confusion of the slash with the backslash ⟨\⟩ largely arises from the use of the latter as the path component separator in the widely used MS-DOS and Windows systems.[9][10]
Networking
[edit]The slash is used in a similar fashion in internet URLs (e.g., https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slash_(punctuation)).[11] Often this portion of such URLs corresponds with files on a Unix server with the same name, and this is where this convention for internet URLs comes from.
The slash in an IP address (e.g., 192.0.2.0/29) indicates the prefix size in CIDR notation. The number of addresses of a subnet may be calculated as 2address size − prefix size, in which the address size is 128 for IPv6 and 32 for IPv4. For example, in IPv4, the prefix size/29 gives: 232–29 = 23 = 8 addresses.
Programming
[edit]The slash is used as a division operator in most programming languages while APL uses it for reduction (fold) and compression (filter). The double slash is used by Rexx as a modulo operator, and Python (starting in version 2.2) uses a double slash for division which rounds (using floor) to an integer. In Raku the double slash is used as a "defined-or" alternative to ||. A dot and slash ⟨./⟩ is used in MATLAB and GNU Octave to indicate an element-by-element division of matrices.
Comments that begin with /* (a slash and an asterisk) and end with */ were introduced in PL/I and subsequently adopted by SAS, C, Rexx, C++, Java, JavaScript, PHP, CSS, and C#. A double slash // is also used by C99, C++, C#, PHP, Java, Swift, Pascal and JavaScript to start a single line comment.
In SGML and derived languages such as HTML and XML, a slash is used in closing tags. For example, in HTML, <b> begins a section of bold text and </b> closes it. In XHTML, slashes are also necessary for "self-closing" elements such as the newline command <br /> where HTML has simply <br>.
In a style originating in the Digital Equipment Corporation line of operating systems (OS/8, RT-11, TOPS-10, et cetera), Windows, DOS, some CP/M programs, OpenVMS, and OS/2 all use the slash to indicate command-line options. For example, the command dir/w is understood as using the command dir ("directory") with the "wide" option. No space is required between the command and the switch; this was the reason for the choice to use backslashes as the path separator since one would otherwise be unable to run a program in a different directory.
Slashes are used as the standard delimiters for regular expressions, although other characters can be used instead.
IBM JCL uses a double slash to start each line in a batch job stream except for /* and /&.
Programs
[edit]IRC and many in-game chat clients use the slash to mark commands, such as joining and leaving a chat room or sending private messages. For example, in IRC, /join #services is a command to join the channel "services" and /me is a command to format the following message as though it were an action instead of a spoken message. In Minecraft's chat function, the slash is used for executing console and plugin commands. In Second Life's chat function, the slash is used to select the "communications channel", allowing users to direct commands to virtual objects "listening" on different channels. For example, if a virtual house's lights were set to use channel 42, the command "/42 on" would turn them on. In Discord, slash commands are used to send special messages and execute commands, like sending a shrug emoji (¯\_(ツ)_/¯) or a table flip emoji ((╯°□°)╯︵ ┻━┻), or changing one's nickname using "/nick". Slash commands can also be used to use Discord bots.
The Gedcom standard for exchanging computerized genealogical data uses slashes to delimit surnames; an example would be Bill /Smith/ Jr. Slashes around surnames are also used in Personal Ancestral File.
Electronics
[edit]A leading slash is one of several common conventions for indicating an active-low digital signal, which performs the named function when at a low voltage level.[26] For example, dynamic random-access memory has active-low Chip Select, Row Address Strobe and Column Address Strobe signals, commonly written /CS, /RAS, and /CAS.[27] This extends to signals which select between two options, such as "R/W", which indicates that the function is "read" when high and "write" when low. (Sometimes written as R/W for greater clarity.[28]
Currency
[edit]
The slash (as the "shilling mark" or "solidus")[29] was an abbreviation for the shilling, a former coin of the United Kingdom and its former colonies. Before the decimalisation of currency in Britain, its currency abbreviations (collectively £sd) represented their Latin names, derived from a medieval French modification of the late Roman libra, solidus, and denarius.[30] Thus, one penny less than two pounds was written £1 19s 11d or £1 19ſ 11d. During the period when English orthography included the long s, ſ or ſ, (abbreviating shilling) the ſ came to be written as a single slash.[31][32] The d. might be omitted, and "2ſ6" ("two shillings and sixpence") became simplified as 2/6.[29] Amounts in full pounds, shillings and pence could be written in many different ways, for example: £1 9s 6d, £1.9.6, £1-9-6, and even £1/9/6d (with a slash used also to separate pounds and shillings).[33] The same style was also used under the British Raj and early independent India for the predecimalization rupee/anna/pie system.[34]
In five East African countries (Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda, Somalia, and the de facto country of Somaliland), where the national currencies are denominated in shillings, the decimal separator is a slash mark (e.g., 2/50). Where the minor unit is zero, an equals sign is used (e.g., 5/=).
Dates
[edit]Slashes are a common calendar date separator[11] used across many countries and by some standards such as the Common Log Format used by web servers. Depending on context, it may be in the form Day/Month/Year, Month/Day/Year, or Year/Month/Day. If only two elements are present, they typically denote a day and month in some order. For example, 9/11 is a common American way of writing the date 11 September; Britons write this as 11/9. Owing to the ambiguity across cultures, the practice of using only two elements to denote a date is sometimes proscribed.[35]
Because of the world's many varying conventional date and time formats, ISO 8601 advocates the use of a Year-Month-Day system separated by hyphens (e.g., Victory in Europe Day occurred on 1945-05-08). In the ISO 8601 system, slashes represent date ranges: "1939/1945" represents what is more commonly written in Anglophone countries as "1939–1945". The autumn term of a northern-hemisphere school year might be marked "2010-09-01/12-22".
In English, a range marked by a slash often has a separate meaning from one marked by a dash or hyphen.[11] "24/25 December" would mark the time shared by both days (i.e., the night from Christmas Eve to Christmas morning) rather than the time made up by both days together, which would be written "24–25 December". Similarly, a historical reference to "1066/67" might imply an event occurred during the winter of late 1066 and early 1067,[36] whereas a reference to 1066–67 would cover the entirety of both years. The usage was particularly common in British English during World War II, where such slash dates were used for night-bombing air raids. It is also used by some police forces in the United States.
Numbering
[edit]The slash is used in numbering to note totals. For example, "page 17/35" indicates that the relevant passage is on the 17th page of a 35-page document. Similarly, the marking "#333/500" on a product indicates it is the 333rd out of 500 identical products or out of a batch of 500 such products. For scores on schoolwork, in games, and so on, "85/100" indicates 85 points were attained out of a possible 100.
Slashes are also sometimes used to mark ranges in numbers that already include hyphens or dashes. One example is the ISO treatment of dating. Another is the US Air Force's treatment of aircraft serial numbers, which are normally written to note the fiscal year and aircraft number. For example, "85-1000" notes the thousandth aircraft ordered in fiscal year 1985. To indicate the next fifty subsequent aircraft, a slash is used in place of a hyphen or dash: "85-1001/1050".
Linguistic transcription
[edit]A pair of slashes (as "slants") are used in the transcription of speech to enclose pronunciations (i.e., phonetic transcriptions). For example, the IPA transcription of the English pronunciation of "solidus" is written /ˈsɒlɪdəs/.[6] Properly, slashes mark broad or phonemic transcriptions, whereas narrow, allophonic transcriptions are enclosed by square brackets. For example, the word little may be broadly rendered as /ˈlɪtəl/ but a careful transcription of the velarization of the second L would be written [ˈlɪɾɫ̩].
In sociolinguistics, a double or triple slash may also be used in the transcription of a traditional sociolinguistic interview or in other type of linguistic elicitation to represent simultaneous speech, interruptions, and certain types of speech disfluencies.
Single and double slashes are often used as typographic substitutes for the click letters ǀ, ǁ.
A diaphonemic transcription may be marked in several ways, e.g. with a pair of slash marks (⫽◌⫽).
Poetry
[edit]The slash is used in various scansion notations for representing the metrical pattern of a line of verse, typically to indicate a stressed syllable.[citation needed]
Line breaks
[edit]The slash (as a "virgule") offset by spaces to either side is used to mark line breaks when transcribing text from a multi-line format into a single-line one.[11][37] It is particularly common in quoting poetry, song lyrics, and dramatic scripts, formats where omitting the line breaks risks losing meaningful context. For example, here is a part of Hamlet's soliloquy:
To be, or not to be, that is the question:
Whether 'tis Nobler in the mind to suffer
The Slings and Arrows of outrageous Fortune,
Or to take Arms against a Sea of troubles,
And by opposing end them...
If someone wanted to quote the above soliloquy in a prose paragraph, it is standard to mark the line breaks as follows: "To be, or not to be, that is the question: / Whether 'tis nobler in the mind to suffer / The slings and arrows of outrageous Fortune, / Or to take arms against a sea of troubles, / And by opposing end them..." Less often, virgules are used in marking paragraph breaks when quoting a prose passage. Some style guides, such as New Hart's, prefer to use a pipe | in place of the slash to mark these line and paragraph breaks.[11]
The virgule may be thinner than a standard slash when typeset. In computing contexts, it may be necessary to use a non-breaking space before the virgule to prevent it from being widowed on the next line.
Abbreviation
[edit]The slash has become standard in several abbreviations. Generally, it is used to mark two-letter initialisms such as A/C (short for "air conditioner"), w/o ("without"), b/w ("black and white" or, less often, "between"), w/e ("whatever" or, less often, "weekend" or "week ending"), i/o ("input/output"), r/w ("read/write"), and n/a ("not applicable" or, in aviation, "not authorized"). Other initialisms employing the slash include w/ ("with") and w/r/t ("with regard to"). Such slashed abbreviations are somewhat more common in British English and were more common around the Second World War (as with "S/E" to mean "single-engined"). The abbreviation 24/7 (denoting 24 hours a day, 7 days a week) describes a business that is always open or unceasing activity.[11]
The slash in derived units such as m/s (meters per second) is not an abbreviation slash, but a straight division. It is however in that position read as 'per' rather than e.g. 'over', which can be seen as analogous to units whose symbols are pure abbreviations such as mph (miles per hour), although in abbreviations 'per' is 'p' or dropped entirely (psi, pounds per square inch) rather than a slash.
In the US government, the names of offices within various departments are abbreviated using slashes, starting with the larger office and following with its subdivisions. For example, the Federal Aviation Administration's Office of Commercial Space Transportation is formally abbreviated FAA/AST.
Proofreading
[edit]The slash or vertical bar (as a "separatrix") is used in proofreading to mark the end of margin notes[c] or to separate margin notes from one another. The slash is also sometimes used in various proofreading initialisms, such as l/c and u/c for changes to lower and upper case, respectively.
Business correspondence
[edit]In formal business correspondence, when a letter is typed by someone other than the person responsible for its contents, it is standard to add a suffix with the initials of the author (in upper-case), and typist (in lower-case) after the signature block, separated by a slash. For example, a letter typed by D.E. at the direction of A.B.C. would include the line "ABC/de".[40]
Fiction
[edit]The slash is used in fan fiction to mark the romantic pairing a piece will focus upon (e.g., a K/S denoted a Star Trek story would focus on a sexual relationship between Kirk and Spock), a usage which developed in the 1970s from the earlier friendship pairings marked by ampersands (e.g., K&S). The genre as a whole is now known as slash fiction. Because it is more generally associated with homosexual male relationships, lesbian slash fiction is sometimes distinguished as femslash. In situations where other pairings occur, the genres may be distinguished as m/m, f/f, and so on.
Libraries
[edit]The slash is used under the Anglo-American Cataloguing Rules to separate the title of a work from its statement of responsibility (i.e., the listing of its author, director, etc.). Like a line break, this slash is surrounded by a single space on either side. For example:
- Gone with the Wind / by Margaret Mitchell.
- Star Trek II. The Wrath of Khan [videorecording] / Paramount Pictures.
The format is used in both card catalogs and online records.
Addresses
[edit]The slash is sometimes used as an abbreviation for building numbers. For example, in some contexts,[where?] 8/A Evergreen Gardens specifies Apartment 8 in Building A of the residential complex Evergreen Gardens. In the United States, however, such an address refers to the first division of Apartment 8 and is simply a variant of Apartment 8A or 8-A. Similarly in the United Kingdom, an address such as 12/2 Anywhere Road means flat (or apartment) 2 in the building numbered 12 on Anywhere Road.
The slash is also used in the United States in the postal abbreviation for "care of." For example, Judy Smith c/o Bob Smith could be used when Bob Smith is receiving mail on Judy's behalf. Typically, this would be used in a situation where someone is either out of town, in an institution or hotel, or temporarily staying at another's address.
In Spanish address writings, "c/" is used as the abbreviation of "calle" (or "carrer" in Catalan) meaning "street".
Music
[edit]Slashes are used in musical notation as an alternative to writing out specific notes where it is easier to read than traditional notation or where the player can improvise. They are commonly used to indicate chords either in place of or in combination with traditional notation, notably in the form of slash chords. For drummers, they find use as an indication to continue with a previously indicated style.
Sports
[edit]A slash is used to mark a spare (knocking down all ten pins in two throws) when scoring ten-pin and duckpin bowling.[41]
Text messaging
[edit]In online messaging, a slash might be used to imitate the formatting of a chat command (e.g., writing "/fliptable" as though there were such a command) or the closing tags of languages such as HTML (e.g., writing "/endrant" to end a diatribe or "/s" to mark the preceding text as sarcastic). A pair of slashes is sometimes used as a way to mark italic text, where no special formatting is available (e.g., /italics/).[citation needed]
Before an e-signature
[edit]In legal writing, especially in a pleading, attorneys often sign their name with an "s" that is either enclosed by two slashes or followed by a single slash and preceding the attorney's name.[42] An example would be the following:
/s/ Bob Smith
Attorney for Plaintiff
As a letter
[edit]The Iraqw language of Tanzania uses the slash as a letter, representing the voiced pharyngeal fricative, as in /ameeni, "woman".[43]
Spacing
[edit]There are usually no spaces either before or after a slash. According to New Hart's Rules: The Oxford Style Guide, a slash is usually written without spacing on either side when it connects single words, letters or symbols.[11] Exceptions are in representing the start of a new line when quoting verse, or a new paragraph when quoting prose. The Chicago Manual of Style also allows spaces when either of the separated items is a compound that itself includes a space: "Our New Zealand / Western Australia trip".[44] (Compare use of an en dash used to separate such compounds.) The Canadian Style: A Guide to Writing and Editing prescribes: "No space before or after an oblique when used between individual words, letters or symbols; one space before and after the oblique when used between longer groups which contain internal spacing", giving the examples "n/a" and "Language and Society / Langue et société".[45]
According to The Chicago Manual of Style, when typesetting a URL or computer path, line breaks should occur before a slash but not in the text between two slashes.[46]
Unicode
[edit]
As a very common character, the slash (as "slant") was originally encoded in ASCII with the decimal code 47 or 0x2F.[47] The same value was used in Unicode, which calls it "solidus" and also adds some more characters:
- U+002F / SOLIDUS (/)[48]
- U+0337 ◌̷ COMBINING SHORT SOLIDUS OVERLAY (for strikethrough)
- U+0338 ◌̸ COMBINING LONG SOLIDUS OVERLAY (for strikethrough)
- U+2044 ⁄ FRACTION SLASH
- U+2215 ∕ DIVISION SLASH
- U+2571 ╱ BOX DRAWINGS LIGHT DIAGONAL UPPER RIGHT TO LOWER LEFT
- U+29F8 ⧸ BIG SOLIDUS
- U+FF0F / FULLWIDTH SOLIDUS (fullwidth version of solidus)
- U+1F67C 🙼 VERY HEAVY SOLIDUS

FRACTION SLASH is supposed to reformat the preceding and succeeding digits as numerator and denominator glyphs (e.g., display of "1, FRACTION SLASH, 2" as "½", and similarly "123, FRACTION SLASH, 456" as 123⁄456).[49] This is supported by an increasing number of environments and computer fonts. Because support is not yet universal (this browser, for instance, renders "123⁄456"), some authors still use Unicode subscripts and superscripts to compose fractions, and many computer fonts design these characters for this purpose. In addition, precomposed fractions of the multiples less than 1 of 1/n for 2 ≤ n ≤ 6 and n = 8 (e.g. ⅔ and ⅝, as well as ⅐, ⅑, and ⅒, are found in the Unicode Number Forms or Latin-1 Supplement blocks.[50]
Alternative names
[edit]| Name | Used for |
|---|---|
| diagonal | An uncommon name for the slash in all its uses,[3] |
| division slash | This is the Unicode Consortium's formal name for the variant of the slash used to mark division.[51] (U+2215 ∕ DIVISION SLASH) |
| forward slash | A retronym used to distinguish slash from a backslash following the popularization of MS-DOS and other Microsoft operating systems, which use the backslash for paths in its file system.[9][10] Less often forward stroke (UK), foreslash, front slash, and frontslash. It is possible even to see such back-formations as reverse backslash.[52] |
| fraction slash | This is the Unicode Consortium's formal name for the low slash used to mark fractions.[51] (U+2044 ⁄ FRACTION SLASH) Also sometimes known as the fraction bar, although this more commonly refers to the horizontal bar style, as in 1/2. When used as a fraction bar, this form of the mark is less vertical than an ASCII slash, generally close to 45° and kerned on both sides;[53] this use is distinguished by Unicode as the fraction slash.[51] (This use is sometimes mistakenly described as the sole meaning of "solidus", with its use as a shilling mark and slash distinguished under the name "virgule".[53][54]) |
| oblique | A formerly common name for the slash in all its uses.[3] Also oblique stroke,[55][56] oblique dash, etc. |
| scratch comma | A modern name for the virgule's historic use as a form of comma.[57] |
| separatrix | Originally, the vertical line separating integers from decimals before the advent of the decimal point; later used for the vertical bar or slash used in proofreader's marginalia to denote the intended replacement for a letter or word struckthrough in proofed text[58] or to separate margin notes.[59] Sometimes misapplied to virgules. |
| shilling mark | A development of the long S ſ used as an abbreviation for the (obsolete) British shilling (Latin: solidus),[5] and also for some modern-day currencies (Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda and Somalia), where it acts as a decimal separator (between shillings and cents). The 'slash' is known as a "shilling stroke".[21] |
| slant | From its shape, an infrequent name except (as slants) in its use to mark pronunciations off from other text[60] and as the original ASCII name of the character.[47] Also slant line(s) or bar(s).[9] |
| slash mark | An alternative name used to distinguish the punctuation mark from the word's other senses.[61] |
| slat | An uncommon name for the slash used by the esoteric programming language INTERCAL.[56] Also slak.[56] |
| solidus | Another name for the mark (derived from the Latin form of 'shilling'), also applied to other slashes separating numbers or letters,[6] used in typography,[53] and adopted by the ISO and Unicode[51][62] as their formal name for the ASCII slash ("slant"). (U+002F / SOLIDUS)
The solidus's use as a division sign is distinguished as the division slash.[51] |
| stroke | A contraction of the phrase oblique stroke, used in telegraphy.[55] It is particularly employed in reading the mark out loud: "he stroke she" is a common British reading of "he/she". "Slash" has, however, become common in Britain in computing contexts, while some North American amateur radio enthusiasts employ the British "stroke". Less frequently, "stroke" is also used to refer to hyphens.[9] |
| virgule | A development of virgula ("twig"),[1] the original medieval Latin name of the character when it was used as a scratch comma and caesura mark.[1] Now primarily used as the name of the slash when it is used to mark line breaks in quotations.[citation needed] Sometimes mistakenly distinguished as a formal name for the slash, as against the solidus's supposed use as a fraction slash.[53][54] Formerly sometimes anglicized in British sources as the virgil.[2] |
The slash may also be read out as and, or, and/or, to, or cum in some compounds separated by a slash; over or out of in fractions, division, and numbering; and per or a(n) in derived units (as km/h) and prices (as $~/kg), where the division slash stands for "each".[9][63]
See also
[edit]- A slash in the reverse direction \ is a backslash
- Strikethrough, including slashes through figures
- Feynman slash notation in physics, which employs slash-like strikethroughs
- Inequality sign, an equals sign with a slash-like strikethrough
Notes
[edit]- ^ Nevertheless, the word was already being used in official publications, such as the 1947 style guide of the US Department of Agriculture Forestry Service.[8]
- ^ The ISO 80000 standard says that the division sign ÷, used in elementary schools in many Anglophone countries, "should not be used" to indicate division because in other countries it is used to indicate a range of values or negation.[23]
- ^ For an example of this in practice, see the section on proofreading marks in New Hart's Rules.[39]
References
[edit]- ^ a b c "Virgule". Oxford English Dictionary. Vol. XII (Corrected reissue ed.). Oxford University Press. 1933. p. 235.
- ^ a b c d Partridge, Eric (2003) [1953]. "The Virgule (or Virgil) or the Oblique". You Have a Point There: A Guide to Punctuation and Its Allies. London: Taylor & Francis. pp. 155 ff. ISBN 9781134942244.
- ^ a b c "oblique, adj., n., and adv.". Oxford English Dictionary (3rd ed.). Oxford University Press. 2004.
- ^ "diagonal, adj. and n.". Oxford English Dictionary (1st ed.). Oxford University Press. 1895.
- ^ a b Bradley, Henry (1914). "shilling, n.". In Murray, James A. H. (ed.). Oxford English Dictionary. Vol. VIII (1st ed.). Oxford University Press. p. 697.
1. An English money of account, since the Norman Conquest of the value of 12 pence or 1/20 of a pound sterling. Abbreviated s. (__ L. solidus: see SOLIDUS), formerly also sh., shil.; otherwise denoted by the sign /- after the numeral.
- ^ a b c "solidus". The Oxford English Dictionary. Vol. X (sole–sz). 1913. p. 401 – via Internet Archive.
2. a sloping line used to separate shillings from pence. A shilling mark.
- ^ Compare "Slash (n)". Webster's Third New International Dictionary. 1961. with "Slash (n)". Webster's New American dictionary : completely new and up to date. 1947.
- ^ Larson, E. vH (1947). Style Manual for publications. US Department of Agriculture Forestry Service. Archived from the original on 8 April 2023. Retrieved 19 March 2023.
- ^ a b c d e f Hartman, Jed (27 December 2011). "A Slash by Any Other Name". Neology. Archived from the original on 11 April 2023. Retrieved 15 February 2016.
- ^ a b c Turton, Stuart (15 October 2009). "Berners-Lee: web address slashes were 'a mistake'". PC Pro. Archived from the original on 4 November 2011. Retrieved 21 September 2011.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i Waddingham, Anne, ed. (2014). "Solidi and verticals". New Hart's Rules: The Oxford Style Guide (2nd ed.). Oxford University Press. 4.13.
- ^ a b The Chicago Manual of Style (16th ed.). University of Chicago Press. 2016. 6.104.
- ^ Cunha, Celso; Cintra, Lindley (2001). Nova Gramática do Português Contemporâneo (in Portuguese) (3rd ed.). Rio de Janeiro: Nova Fronteira. ISBN 8520911374.
- ^ "Coleção Números Polêmicos" (PDF). NumPol.com (in Portuguese). Archived from the original (PDF) on 14 July 2011. Retrieved 29 July 2012.
- ^ Fernando de Souza, Robson (27 February 2004). "A proposta do Português com Inclusão de Gênero". Consciência Efervescente (in Portuguese). Archived from the original on 9 July 2012. Retrieved 24 July 2012.
- ^ Curzan, Anne (24 April 2013). "Slash: Not Just a Punctuation Mark Anymore". The Chronicle of Higher Education. "Lingua Franca" column. Archived from the original on 29 October 2013.
- ^ "YouTube video: "Back Like I Never Left - Jourdan River Vacation House Hive Removal"". YouTube. 24 December 2017. Archived from the original on 21 February 2020. Retrieved 27 January 2020.
- ^ YouTube video "Drone laying hive building up and getting new equipment" Archived 3 April 2020 at the Wayback Machine at time 9:16
- ^ "The Terror Duck - Gastornis at time 5:30". YouTube. 29 December 2019. Archived from the original on 6 November 2020. Retrieved 20 October 2020.
- ^ a b Miller, Jeff (22 December 2014). "Fractions". Earliest Uses of Various Mathematical Symbols. Archived from the original on 2 June 2023. Retrieved 15 February 2016 – via Tripod.com.
- ^ a b c Eckersley, Richard; Angstadt, Richard; Ellertson, Charles M.; Hendel, Richard; Pascal, Naomi B.; Walker Scott, Anita (1994). Glossary of Typesetting Terms. University of Chicago Press. pp. 93, 97. ISBN 0226183718.
- ^ Smith, D. E. (1908). Rara Arithmetica. Boston: Ginn & Co. – via Internet Archive.
- ^ ISO 80000-2, Section 9 "Operations", 2-9.6
- ^ De Morgan, Augustus (1845). "The Calculus of Functions". Encyclopædia Metropolitana. London: B. Fellowes et al.
- ^ a b Morgan, Augustus De (1836). "A Treatise on the Calculus of Functions (Extracted From The Encyclopædia Metropolitana)". Baldwin and Cradock. Page 84 in this version
- ^ Stokes, Jon "Hannibal" (June 2008). "RAM Guide: Part I DRAM and SRAM Basics". Ars Technica. p. 3.
Putting a "/" in front of the pin name is the standard text way of writing it with a line over it. The "/" or line signifies that the pin is activated by a low voltage, or logic 0.
- ^ 512Mb DDR SDRAM HY5DU12422A(L)T, HY5DU12822A(L)T, HY5DU121622A(L)T (PDF) (Data sheet). Hynix. February 2003. p. 5.
- ^ Rison, Bill (7 April 2010). EE 308: Address, Data and Control Buses) (PDF) (Class Notes). p. 5. Retrieved 25 November 2024.
It brings the Read/Write (R/W) line low to indicate a write
- ^ a b Fowler, Francis George (1917). "solidus". The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Current English. p. 829 – via Internet Archive.
sǒ·lidus, n. (pl. -di). (Hist.) gold coin introduced by Roman Emperor Constantine; (only in abbr. s.) shilling(s), as 7s. 6d., £1 1s.; the shilling line (for ſ or long s) as in 7/6. [LL use of L SOLIDus]
- ^ Ojima, Fumita (November 2004). "Money in Shakespeare" (PDF). Journal of Business Administration (63). Toyo University Press: 113. ISSN 0286-6439. OCLC 835683007. Archived (PDF) from the original on 10 June 2014. Retrieved 10 June 2014. See also Carolingian monetary system.
- ^ The Chicago Manual of Style (13th ed.). University of Chicago Press. 1982. p. 676.
- ^ Scientific Style and Format: The CBE Manual for Authors, Editors, and Publishers. Cambridge University Press. 1994. p. 65. Bibcode:1994ssfc.book.....S.
- ^ "Manuscripts and special Collections: Money". University of Nottingham. Archived from the original on 12 March 2014. Retrieved 28 November 2021.
- ^ Pandey, Anshuman (7 October 2007). "Proposal to Encode North Indic Number Forms in ISO/IEC 10646" (PDF). University of Michigan. p. 8. Archived (PDF) from the original on 9 May 2012.
- ^ The Chicago Manual of Style (16th ed.). University of Chicago Press. 2016. 6.106.
- ^ The Chicago Manual of Style (16th ed.). University of Chicago Press. 2016. 6.105.
- ^ The Chicago Manual of Style (16th ed.). University of Chicago Press. 2016. 13.27.
- ^ Shakespeare. Hamlet. Act III, Scene II.
- ^ Waddingham, Anne, ed. (2014). "Marking Proofs". New Hart's Rules: The Oxford Style Guide (2nd ed.). Oxford University Press. 2.4.
- ^ Hamlin, Kristen (7 August 2017). "How to Indicate a Typist's Initials in a Letter". Pen and the Pad. Retrieved 24 November 2024.
- ^ "Scoring Duckpin Bowling". Duckpins.com. Archived from the original on 8 April 2023.
- ^ "What Does /s/ Mean in a Signature and Why is It Used?". BizCounsel. L. & F. Brown. Archived from the original on 1 April 2023. Retrieved 1 April 2023.
- ^ Henry R. T. Muzale, Josephat M. Rugemalira, Researching and Documenting the Languages of Tanzania (2008): "Iraqi orthography includes two letters not used in writing Kiswa-hili, q for the voiceless uvular stop, and x for the voiceless velar fricative. It also uses symbols that are not even part of the Roman alphabet, including a slash / for the pharyngeal fricative, and an apostrophe ' for the glottal stop (Mous et al. 2002)."
- ^ "Punctuation - FAQ Item [CMOS 6.104]". The Chicago Manual of Style Online. Archived from the original on 21 March 2016. Retrieved 11 February 2020.
- ^ "7.02 Spacing, 9.06". btb.termiumplus.gc.ca. Translation Bureau, Public Works and Government Services Canada. 8 October 2009. Archived from the original on 8 November 2018. Retrieved 11 February 2020.
- ^ The Chicago Manual of Style (16th ed.). University of Chicago Press. 2016. 7.42.
- ^ a b V. Cerf (16 October 1969). ASCII format for Network Interchange. Network Working Group. doi:10.17487/RFC0020. STD 80. RFC 20. Internet Standard 80.
- ^ "Character Codes – HTML Codes, Hexadecimal Codes & HTML Names". character-code.com. Archived from the original on 7 August 2016. Retrieved 7 August 2016.
- ^ Allen, Julie D., ed. (2011). "Writing Systems and Punctuation: General Punctuation: Fraction Slash" (PDF). The Unicode Standard (6.0 ed.). Unicode Consortium. p. 192. ISBN 9781936213016. Archived (PDF) from the original on 30 July 2015. Retrieved 30 May 2018.
- ^ "Number Forms" (PDF). The Unicode Standard (12.1 ed.). Unicode Consortium. 2019. Archived (PDF) from the original on 24 November 2019. Retrieved 22 November 2019.
- ^ a b c d e "C0 Controls and Basic Latin" (PDF). Unicode Cosortium. 2015. Archived (PDF) from the original on 13 September 2023.
- ^ Example of usage of "reverse backslash": Fordraiders (4 October 2014). "Regex pattern to delete a pattern i need for forward backslash and reverse backslash". Experts Exchange. Archived from the original on 16 April 2023. Retrieved 2 October 2014.
- ^ a b c d Bringhurst, Robert (2002). "5.2.5: Use the Virgule with Words and Dates, the Solidus with Split-level Fractions". The Elements of Typographic Style (3rd ed.). Point Roberts: Hartley & Marks. pp. 81–82. ISBN 978-0-88179-206-5.
- ^ a b Klein, Samuel John (3 March 2006). "Typography Words of the Day: Slashes". Designorati. Archived from the original on 24 February 2016. Retrieved 16 February 2016.
- ^ a b "stroke, n.¹". Oxford English Dictionary (1st ed.). Oxford University Press. 1919.
- ^ a b c Howe, Denis (1996). "oblique stroke". Free On-Line Dictionary of Computing. Archived from the original on 9 June 2023. Retrieved 24 July 2012.
- ^ "scratch, n.¹". Oxford English Dictionary (1st ed.). Oxford University Press. 1911.
- ^ "separatrix, n.". Oxford English Dictionary (1st ed.). Oxford University Press. 1912.
- ^ "separatrix". Merriam-Webster Online. Archived from the original on 8 July 2023. Retrieved 11 February 2016.
- ^ "slant, n.¹". Oxford English Dictionary (1st ed.). Oxford University Press. 1911.
- ^ "Slash (n)". Webster's Third New International Dictionary. 1961.
5 also slash mark: DIAGONAL : 4
- ^ "Unicode 1.1 Composite Name List, including default properties". Unicode.org. Unicode Consortium. 5 July 1995. Archived from the original on 16 May 2023.
- ^ "Slash". The Punctuation Guide. Archived from the original on 12 May 2023. Retrieved 11 February 2016.
Slash (punctuation)
View on GrokipediaDefinition and Terminology
Symbol and Variants
The slash is an oblique punctuation mark consisting of a short line slanting from lower left to upper right, standardized in Unicode as U+002F SOLIDUS (/). This glyph serves as the primary form in contemporary typography and computing, where it functions to separate elements such as alternatives, dates, or ratios.[9] It differs from the backslash (U+005C REVERSE SOLIDUS, ), a mirrored variant slanting from upper left to lower right, which originated in programming for path delimiters and escape sequences rather than general punctuation.[2] Typographically, the forward slash encompasses historical distinctions: the virgule, a steeper, more vertical stroke derived from medieval comma-like separators for pauses or alternatives (e.g., and/or), and the solidus proper, a thinner, more horizontal or oblique form suited to fractions or British monetary notation (e.g., 10/6 for ten shillings and sixpence).[10][7] In practice, modern fonts often render these as the same U+002F glyph, blurring the traditional angle-based differentiation, though the virgule's verticality persists in keyboard input for separation tasks.[11] Specialized Unicode variants adapt the slash's form for precise contexts: the fraction slash (U+2044 FRACTION SLASH, ⁄), shorter and angled to nest between numerals in inline expressions like 1⁄3 for better legibility; and the division slash (U+2215 DIVISION SLASH, ∕), with a bolder slant for mathematical quotients, avoiding confusion with multiplication symbols.[12] These maintain the core oblique stroke but vary in height, thickness, and inclination to optimize spacing and clarity in technical typesetting.[13]Historical and Technical Names
The punctuation mark /, a forward-slanting line, has acquired numerous historical and technical designations reflecting its roles in medieval pausing, printing, currency, and modern notation. Originating as the virgule—from Latin virgula, meaning "little rod" or "twig"—it served in medieval manuscripts as a comma-like indicator of short pauses or line breaks in poetry, with early attestation by the 12th-century Italian scholar Buoncompagno da Signa, who described an "upright virgule" for such purposes.[14][3] In 18th- and 19th-century English typography, the mark was frequently termed the oblique or oblique stroke, emphasizing its diagonal orientation as distinct from vertical or horizontal lines; this usage persisted in technical contexts like engineering into the mid-20th century.[7] The designation solidus emerged from its application as a shilling mark in pre-decimal British currency (e.g., 7/6 denoting seven shillings and sixpence), where solidus alluded to the Roman gold coin of the same name introduced by Constantine the Great in 312 CE and later adapted for the shilling; printers adopted the term to differentiate the slanted line from shorter fraction bars.[7][4] By the 20th century, slash gained prominence in American English for its shorthand evocation of a cutting stroke, while stroke or slant prevailed in British English for general punctuation; informal variants like whack or scratch comma appeared in colloquial printing slang but lacked standardization.[15] Additional technical terms include diagonal for its geometric form and separatrix in mathematical proofreading to denote separation of elements, such as in ratios or alternatives (e.g., and/or).[7] These names underscore the mark's transition from a versatile medieval pause indicator to a specialized symbol in computing and fractions, where forward slash distinguishes it from the backslash () in ASCII encoding established in 1963.[16]History
Medieval Origins
The virgule, rendered as a forward-sloping line (/), originated in medieval European manuscripts as a punctuation mark denoting brief pauses in reading, akin to the modern comma's role in separating clauses or phrases. Derived etymologically from Latin virgula ("small rod" or "twig"), the term entered vernacular usage through Old French virgule by the 16th century, though the symbol itself predates this nomenclature and appeared in Latin scriptoria from at least the 12th century. Scribes applied it in scriptio continua—unspaced text common before the 11th–12th-century adoption of word separation in Carolingian minuscule—to clarify syntactic breaks, often alongside dots or points for longer stops. This development aligned with the era's rhetorical emphasis on oral delivery, where punctuation guided breath control rather than silent parsing.[3][7] One early advocate was the 12th-century Italian scholar Boncompagno da Signa, who in his rhetorical treatise Rhetorica novissima (c. 1235) recommended the virgule for marking short hesitations in prose, distinguishing it from extended pauses indicated by dashes or other strokes. In poetic contexts, such as late 14th-century English works by Geoffrey Chaucer, virgules delineated caesuras or metrical divisions, facilitating recitation in verse forms like iambic pentameter. Manuscripts of biblical, classical, and vernacular texts from this period routinely incorporated the mark, with variations including upright or curved forms depending on regional scripts like Gothic or Insular. Its prevalence underscores a causal shift from ad hoc notational aids to more standardized systems amid rising literacy and textual production in monastic and university settings.[5][7] By the late Middle Ages, the virgule's utility extended to abbreviations and line-end separations, though its phonetic primacy waned as printing presses in the 15th century favored emerging comma forms. Surviving codices, such as those from 13th-century French and English collections, preserve examples where multiple virgules clustered to denote emphasis or quotation, reflecting scribes' improvisational adaptations without rigid conventions. This foundational role established the slash's trajectory from a medieval respiratory cue to later multifunctional uses, unencumbered by modern ideological overlays on textual clarity.[17][5]Early Modern Developments
In the early modern period, the advent of movable-type printing standardized the virgule's form and application across Europe. Venetian printer Aldus Manutius adapted the existing high-placed virgule—previously a slash-like mark for pauses—by lowering it to the baseline and curving it slightly, creating the direct ancestor of the modern comma in his influential editions of classical texts from the late 15th and early 16th centuries.[18] This innovation emphasized syntactic clarity over mere breath groups, reflecting a humanist shift toward precise textual interpretation in printed works.[19] Regional variations persisted, notably in Central European Fraktur typesetting, where the single virgule functioned as a comma equivalent for separating clauses, while double virgules (//) denoted longer pauses akin to dashes; this practice was common in German imprints throughout the 16th and 17th centuries before transitioning toward curved commas in the 18th. English printers, influenced by continental models, retained the virgule for similar clause divisions in early 16th-century books, though it gradually yielded to the comma in vernacular texts by mid-century.[20] In mathematical and scientific printing, the solidus (a variant of the virgule) emerged as a practical diagonal fraction bar, supplanting the horizontal vinculum bar, which demanded alignment of three separate type pieces and proved cumbersome for compositors. This typographic expedient enabled inline fractions like in 16th-century treatises, enhancing readability without specialized sorts.[21]19th-20th Century Standardization
In the 19th century, the oblique stroke, previously termed the virgule, saw expanded use in British monetary notation as the shilling mark, separating shillings from pence in prices such as 2/6d for two shillings and sixpence; this convention, rooted in earlier accounting practices, became ubiquitous in printed ledgers, newspapers, and commerce until the decimalization of the pound sterling on February 15, 1971.[22] The mark's straight or slightly leaning form was cast in standard metal type fonts by major foundries like Stephenson Blake, ensuring consistency across printed matter amid the era's explosion in mechanized typesetting, including the Linotype machine patented in 1884.[23] The introduction of commercial typewriters from 1874 onward incorporated the forward slash as a dedicated key, facilitating its routine inclusion in business correspondence, dates (e.g., 10/12/1890), and abbreviations, which promoted uniformity in non-print media.[24] By the early 20th century, printers and typists increasingly referred to the virgule as the "slash," a shift evident in trade publications and reflecting its abbreviation roles like c/o for "care of" or w/o for "without."[5] Style manuals of the period, such as those emerging from U.S. publishing houses, began specifying the slash's limited punctuation roles—primarily for alternatives or line breaks in quoted poetry—while cautioning against overuse, as its medieval pause function had largely yielded to commas and dashes in modern prose. This codification aligned with broader punctuation hierarchies formalized by grammarians, positioning the slash below major stops in rhetorical weight.[7] International variations persisted, with Fraktur-influenced European printing retaining slashes for comma-like separations into the early 1900s, but Anglo-American standards favored restraint outside technical contexts.[25]Linguistic Usage
Alternatives and Connections
In linguistic contexts, the slash functions as a compact indicator of alternatives, substituting for "or" in pairings like "he/she" or "yes/no", and for "and/or" to suggest inclusive options.[26] This usage emerged as shorthand in informal English writing by the mid-20th century, but formal style guides advise against it, recommending explicit conjunctions such as "he or she" or rephrasing to eliminate ambiguity, as slashes can imply exclusivity or vagueness unintended by the writer.[8][27] Alternatives to the slash for denoting alternatives include hyphens for compound terms involving coequal nouns, as in "mother-in-law" instead of "mother/law", which preserves clarity without suggesting optionality.[26] Parentheses or full sentences can also separate options, such as "(he or she)", aligning with preferences in professional editing to prioritize readability over brevity.[28] The slash connects to other punctuation by overlapping functions with the en dash, which better conveys conceptual links or oppositions, as in "nature–nurture debate" rather than "nature/nurture", a distinction formalized in typesetting practices since the 1980s to differentiate informal shorthands from relational indicators.[1] Historically, it echoes the virgule's role in medieval manuscripts for pauses or separations akin to modern commas or slashes, linking it to broader prosodic punctuation evolution.[1]Poetry and Line Breaks
The slash, also known as the virgule, serves primarily to denote line breaks in poetry when verses are quoted within continuous prose text, allowing the preservation of poetic structure without altering page layout.[2][1] This convention applies especially to short quotations of fewer than three or four lines, where the slash is inserted at the end of each line without preceding or following spaces, as in "Tyger Tyger, burning bright, / In the forests of the night."[29][7] Style guides such as MLA recommend this method to signal the original lineation clearly to readers.[29] Historically, the slash's role in marking poetic divisions traces to the medieval virgule, a slanted line derived from the Latin virgula ("little rod"), which functioned in manuscripts as a pause indicator akin to a comma and was employed to separate lines or phrases in verse.[3] By the early modern period, this evolved into a dedicated marker for line breaks in printed poetry, distinguishing it from other punctuation like the solidus used in fractions.[7] In contemporary usage, when eliding entire lines from longer quotations, an ellipsis replaces the omitted content, with slashes still indicating retained line breaks, ensuring fidelity to the poem's rhythm and form.[30] Beyond quotation conventions, poets occasionally employ the slash within original verse for stylistic effects, such as emphasizing caesurae, rhythmic pauses, or fragmented thoughts, though this remains secondary to its prosaic function and risks disrupting traditional lineation.[2][31] For instance, in experimental works, slashes may mimic oral delivery breaks or visual fragmentation, but style authorities caution against overuse, as it can obscure the poem's intended prosody.[1] This application underscores the slash's versatility while rooted in its core utility for structural demarcation.[7]Abbreviations and Proofreading
In informal abbreviations, the slash substitutes for words such as prepositions or conjunctions to shorten phrases, as in "w/" for "with," "w/o" for "without," and "c/o" for "care of."[2][28] This practice originated in handwriting and note-taking for brevity but introduces risks of misinterpretation, particularly in ambiguous contexts like "and/or," where it implies inclusivity or exclusivity without clear resolution.[32] Style guides such as those from the Associated Press recommend limiting such slashes to casual communication, favoring spelled-out forms in formal writing to maintain clarity.[33] In proofreading and copyediting, the slash functions primarily as a marginal separator to distinguish multiple correction symbols applied to the same line of text, preventing confusion in dense annotations.[34][35] For example, when a proofreader notes changes for spelling, punctuation, and spacing simultaneously, slashes divide the symbols (e.g., ^/sp/∧) in the margin opposite the affected text. This convention, standardized in mid-20th-century printing practices, enhances efficiency in manual proofing but has diminished with digital tools like track changes in word processors.[36] Some traditional systems also employ a slash struck through text to signal insertion of a period or other punctuation, though this overlaps with dedicated delete or insert marks.[37]Mathematical and Scientific Usage
Fractions and Division
The solidus, or slash (/), functions as a vinculum substitute in inline mathematical notation for fractions, where a/b denotes the ratio of a to b, allowing compact representation without vertical space for a horizontal bar.[38] This typographic convention, rooted in the need to fit fractions within text lines, contrasts with displayed fractions using overlines or built-up structures in formal typesetting.[38] In division operations, the slash serves as an infix binary operator equivalent to the obelus (÷), but it predominates in advanced mathematics, programming, and scientific writing due to its alignment in linear expressions, whereas the obelus appears primarily in elementary education.[39] The obelus originated as a division symbol in 1659 with Johann Rahn's Teutsche Algebra, initially for subtraction or ratios before standardization as ÷.[39] International standards, such as ISO 80000-2, endorse the solidus for division to maintain clarity in complex formulas, reserving the obelus for pedagogical simplicity.[40] Unicode differentiates these roles with specialized glyphs: the solidus (U+002F /) for general punctuation, the fraction slash (U+2044 ⁄) for proportional fractions pairing with raised numerators and lowered denominators, and the division slash (U+2215 ∕) for explicit division, though the plain solidus prevails in most digital and printed math contexts.[41] In measurement units per SI conventions, a single solidus signifies division (e.g., m/s for meters per second), prohibiting repetition on the same line to avoid ambiguity like m/s/s.[42] Beyond basic arithmetic, the slash denotes quotients in abstract structures, such as ℤ/nℤ for the integers modulo n, representing the quotient ring where elements are equivalence classes under congruence.[38] This usage extends to group theory, with G/N indicating the quotient group of G by normal subgroup N.[38] Such notations emphasize the slash's role in partitioning sets via relational equivalence, distinct from mere numerical division.Ratios, Sets, and Operations
In mathematics, the slash denotes ratios in inline expressions, such as a/b representing the ratio of a to b, often replacing the word "to" or a colon for brevity in technical writing.[43][44] This usage aligns with its function as a division symbol, facilitating compact notation for proportions like 3/4 in descriptive contexts.[45] For sets, the slash indicates quotient sets formed by equivalence relations. Given a set S and equivalence relation ∼ on S, S/∼ denotes the set of equivalence classes partitioning S.[46] Similarly, in ring theory, ℤ/pℤ represents the quotient ring of integers modulo p, where p is prime.[47] In algebraic structures, the slash signifies quotient operations, such as in group theory where G/N denotes the quotient group of G by its normal subgroup N, comprising cosets gN for g in G.[48] This notation extends to other quotients, emphasizing the slash's role in abstract constructions beyond simple division.[49]Computing and Technology Usage
File Systems and Paths
In POSIX-compliant operating systems, including Unix, Linux, and macOS derivatives, the forward slash '/' functions as the hierarchical delimiter in file paths, separating directory levels and file names to represent the filesystem structure. Absolute paths begin with '/', indicating the root directory, as in/etc/passwd for the system password file.[50] This usage stems from the original Unix filesystem design developed at Bell Labs in the early 1970s, where '/' was selected to denote directory separation, predating widespread alternatives.[51]
Microsoft Windows primarily employs the backslash '' as the path separator, a choice inherited from MS-DOS in 1981 to avoid conflicts with forward slashes used for command-line switches in CP/M-derived systems. However, Windows kernels and APIs, starting from early NT versions, normalize forward slashes to backslashes in path processing, enabling cross-platform compatibility in tools like command prompts and programming interfaces. For instance, C:/Users/Example resolves equivalently to C:\Users\Example.[52] [53]
The forward slash is reserved and prohibited in file or directory names across Unix-like systems, enforced by the kernel to preserve its role as a separator; attempts to include it result in invalid path errors.[54] In path resolution, Unix kernels treat multiple consecutive forward slashes as equivalent to a single instance, such as //home/user resolving to /home/user, to simplify input handling without altering semantics.[55] This normalization aids robustness in scripts and user inputs but does not extend to filename encoding, where '/' remains excluded.[56]
Web and Networking Protocols
In web protocols, the forward slash serves as a delimiter in Uniform Resource Identifiers (URIs) and Uniform Resource Locators (URLs), separating hierarchical components of the path to denote resource structure. According to RFC 3986, the path component consists of one or more path segments separated by slashes, forming an absolute or relative hierarchy, such as inhttp://example.com/pub/ietf/uri/, where each slash delineates a directory level or resource segment.[57] The double slash (//) immediately following the scheme (e.g., http://) introduces the authority component (host and port), with the subsequent single slash marking the start of the path if present; an empty path is normalized to a single slash for schemes like HTTP.[57] In HTTP specifically, as outlined in RFC 1738, the slash within the path designates nested structures akin to file system directories, enabling resource addressing like <host>/<path>?<searchpart>.[58]
Similar usage appears in other transfer protocols, such as FTP, where forward slashes separate path components to represent server-side directory hierarchies, distinct from Windows backslashes; paths must employ slashes, with encoding (e.g., %2F) required if the slash is not functioning as a delimiter.[58] Trailing slashes in URL paths conventionally signal directories rather than files, influencing server-side routing and canonicalization, though not strictly mandated by protocols and subject to normalization rules like removal of dot-segments (./, ../).[57]
In networking protocols, the slash denotes prefix length in Classless Inter-Domain Routing (CIDR) notation for IPv4 addresses, compactly specifying a network prefix and subnet mask, as in 192.168.1.0/24, where /24 indicates 24 leading bits fixed for the network (equivalent to mask 255.255.255.0).[59] This notation, formalized in CIDR specifications like RFC 4632 (updating earlier concepts from RFC 1519), facilitates efficient address aggregation and routing table reduction by representing contiguous IP blocks without class boundaries.[59] [60] The slash precedes a decimal integer from 0 to 32, denoting the number of significant bits in the prefix, with broader adoption stemming from 1990s efforts to mitigate IPv4 exhaustion.[59]
Programming and Code Elements
In arithmetic expressions across programming languages such as C, C++, Java, JavaScript, and Python, the forward slash/ functions as the division operator, computing the quotient of two operands and typically yielding a floating-point result when at least one operand is floating-point or, in Python 3 and later, when both are integers.[61][62] For integer-only floor division, languages like Python employ a distinct operator // to truncate toward negative infinity, distinguishing it from the standard / to avoid implicit type coercion issues present in earlier Python versions.[63][64]
For comments, the forward slash initiates single-line remarks in C-style languages including C++, Java, JavaScript, and C#, where // followed by text ignores the remainder of the line until a newline, facilitating code documentation without execution.[65] Multi-line comments use /* to open and */ to close, enclosing blocks regardless of line breaks, a convention originating in C and adopted widely for its brevity in suppressing code sections during debugging or maintenance.[65]
In regular expression syntax, particularly in languages like JavaScript, Perl, and PHP, forward slashes delimit literal patterns as /pattern/flags, where the enclosing / marks the start and end, with optional modifiers like i for case-insensitivity applied afterward; parsers resolve ambiguities between regex literals and division operators via contextual lookahead, such as requiring division after an operand expression.[66][67] This delimiter choice stems from historical influences in Unix tools like sed and awk, prioritizing compactness over escape-heavy alternatives, though it necessitates careful escaping of literal / within patterns to prevent premature termination.[68]
Path construction in code strings often incorporates / as the directory separator for Unix-like systems, with languages like Python and Java allowing it cross-platform via normalization functions, though Windows-native paths prefer \; this usage bridges file handling but adheres to POSIX standards in portable codebases.[50]
Domain-Specific Applications
Dates, Currency, and Measurements
In numerical date formats, the slash functions as a delimiter between the month, day, and year, with conventions varying by region: the United States typically employs MM/DD/YYYY (e.g., 10/25/2025), while many other countries use DD/MM/YYYY (e.g., 25/10/2025).[69] This usage facilitates compact representation in forms, credit cards, and informal writing, though formal standards like ISO 8601 prefer hyphens (YYYY-MM-DD) to minimize ambiguity. The slash also denotes spans across two years, such as fiscal or academic periods (e.g., 2023/24 for the 2023–2024 cycle).[1] In currency notation, the slash historically separated pounds, shillings, and pence in pre-decimal British sterling, as in £5/10/6 for five pounds, ten shillings, and six pence, a practice rooted in the slash's earlier role as a shilling abbreviation and discontinued after decimalization on February 15, 1971.[25] Contemporarily, it structures foreign exchange pairs, where the base currency precedes the slash and the quote currency follows (e.g., EUR/USD = 1.08 signifies 1 euro equals 1.08 U.S. dollars), a convention standardized in forex markets to indicate the price of one unit of the base in terms of the quote.[70] For measurements, the slash expresses ratios or "per" relations in rates and units, such as 25 miles/gallon for fuel efficiency or $4.50/gallon for pricing, and in technical contexts like kilometers/hour (km/h) or pascals (N/m²). Guidelines from bodies like the National Institute of Standards and Technology mandate a single solidus per linear unit expression to prevent misinterpretation (e.g., not m/s/s but m/s²), with no spaces adjacent to the slash for clarity in scientific and engineering documentation.[71][42][72]Addresses, Routes, and Numbering
In house numbering systems, particularly in parts of Europe such as Scotland and Slovakia, the slash separates the primary building identifier from sub-unit designations like flats, apartments, or entrances. For instance, an address formatted as 15/4 West Wallaby Way denotes flat 4 within building 15, facilitating precise location in multi-unit structures.[73] Similarly, in Slovakian systems, a notation like 631/29 distinguishes the main structure (631) from an entrance or portal number (29), accommodating dense urban layouts where distances between sub-entries vary significantly.[74] These conventions aid postal services and mapping tools, though they can complicate automated geocoding, as seen in reports of validation errors in platforms like Google Maps and OpenStreetMap for slashed house numbers.[75][76] In the United States, slashes appear in fractional house numbers to indicate subdivided properties or rear units, such as 1010 1/2 Main Street, where the "1/2" signifies a secondary dwelling or lot division originating from historical land parceling practices.[77] This usage persists in older neighborhoods but is less common in modern developments, which favor suffixes like "A" or "B" for clarity. The U.S. Postal Service generally permits minimal punctuation in delivery address blocks, including slashes when integral to the house number, but recommends uppercase formatting without extraneous symbols to optimize automated sorting.[78] For routes, slashes have limited application in physical addressing, occasionally denoting fractional mile markers or segment divisions in rural or highway notations, though primary route identifiers (e.g., U.S. Route 1) rely on numerals without routine slash usage. In postal routing, abbreviations like "c/o" may employ a slash (c / -) in informal or international styles, but formal guidelines prioritize omission of non-essential punctuation to streamline processing.[72] Overall, slashed notations in numbering prioritize hierarchical precision over uniformity, reflecting local adaptations to urban density and historical subdivision patterns rather than standardized global conventions.Arts, Sports, and Other Fields
In poetry, the slash, also known as the virgule, is employed to denote line breaks when short excerpts are embedded within prose text, preserving the original structure without reformatting. For instance, the opening of a verse might be rendered as "Roses are red / Violets are blue" to indicate the caesura between lines.[8] This convention dates to editorial practices for quoting verse, distinguishing it from pauses within a single line.[1] In metrical scansion, slashes may mark stressed syllables, as in analyses of iambic patterns (/ ´/ ´), aiding rhythmic interpretation.[79]
In music and songwriting, the slash indicates line breaks in lyrics transcribed as continuous text, signaling where performers pause or shift phrasing, such as in "Yesterday / All my troubles seemed so far away."[80] This usage mirrors poetic conventions but accommodates rhythmic or melodic divisions, often avoiding heavier punctuation to maintain flow in performance notes.[81]
In sports notation, slashes appear in fractional scores or ratios, such as "85/100" for points achieved out of a total in games or evaluations, though hyphens or en dashes predominate for final tallies like team results.[1] Betting odds in horse racing or other events are commonly expressed as ratios with slashes, e.g., "2/1" denoting twice the stake on a loss, reflecting probabilistic divisions.[82] In baseball statistics, the "slash line" concatenates metrics like batting average/on-base percentage/slugging percentage (e.g., .300/.400/.500), using slashes to separate interrelated performance indicators for concise player summaries.[83]
In linguistics, paired slashes enclose phonemic transcriptions, distinguishing abstract sound units from phonetic realizations in square brackets, as in /kæt/ for the underlying representation of "cat" regardless of dialectal variation.[84] This notational standard facilitates analysis of language systems, emphasizing contrasts over surface forms.[85]
Standards and Conventions
Spacing and Typographic Rules
In standard English typography, the slash (solidus, /) is typically rendered without adjacent spaces when separating individual words, letters, numbers, or symbols, as in constructions denoting alternatives ("and/or"), fractions ("1/2"), or dates ("10/25/2025").[6][86] This tight spacing preserves visual continuity and prevents misinterpretation as separate elements, a convention rooted in the slash's historical role as a compact separator derived from the virgule in medieval manuscripts.[87] Major style guides reinforce this no-space rule for brevity and clarity in most prose contexts. The Associated Press Stylebook specifies no spaces around slashes in phrases like "and/or" or "over/under," extending to ratios and paired terms to maintain readability in journalism.[88] Similarly, the Chicago Manual of Style (17th edition) mandates no spaces when dividing single words or short elements, though it permits spaces before and after for longer phrases or sentences to enhance comprehension, such as "search / knowledge base."[6][33] In technical writing, such as SI unit notation, the International System requires no spaces around a single solidus per line (e.g., "m/s" for meters per second), prohibiting repetition without parentheses to avoid ambiguity in complex expressions like "kg·m²/s³."[42] An established exception applies to representing line breaks in quoted poetry or verse within running text, where spaces precede and follow the slash to mimic prosodic structure without disrupting paragraph flow, as in "Row, row, row your boat / Gently down the stream."[6][86] This practice is consistent across AP, Chicago, and other guides, distinguishing it from the default no-space rule. In digital contexts like URLs or file paths (e.g., "example.com/path/to/file"), spaces are inherently absent due to protocol standards, aligning with typographic norms to ensure parseability.[72] Variations exist in international styles; for instance, Canadian English follows no spaces for short elements but adds them for extended units, reflecting a balance between compactness and legibility.[87] Over-spacing risks diluting the slash's connective function, potentially conflating it with the em dash or unrelated breaks, while underuse in poetry can obscure metrical intent.[1]Encoding and Unicode Representation
The slash (/) is encoded in the ASCII standard as decimal value 47, equivalent to hexadecimal 2F and binary 00101111.[89][90] This representation dates to the original 1963 ASCII specification, where it functions as a punctuation mark for division or separation.[89] In the Unicode Standard, the slash corresponds to code point U+002F, officially named SOLIDUS, within the Basic Latin block (U+0000 to U+007F). This code point maintains full compatibility with ASCII, allowing seamless interchange in legacy systems. In UTF-8 encoding, U+002F is serialized as the single byte 0x2F, identical to its ASCII form, while UTF-16 uses the two-byte sequence 0x002F and UTF-32 employs four bytes with leading zeros. The character prohibits line breaks immediately before it but permits them after, per Unicode line-breaking rules. Unicode distinguishes the solidus from similar glyphs to support precise typographic and mathematical rendering. For instance, U+2044 FRACTION SLASH (⁄) is narrower and optimized for inline fractions with superscript/subscript numerals, improving alignment in proportional fonts.[91] Similarly, U+2215 DIVISION SLASH (∕) serves mathematical division, with reduced width for better integration in equations. These variants contrast with U+002F's broader obliqueness, which suits general punctuation, path delimiters, and alternatives rather than numeric operations.[92] Confusion between them can arise in plain text but is mitigated in formatted contexts by font metrics and semantic markup.[93]Distinctions from Similar Symbols
The slash (/), also known as the solidus, differs from the backslash () primarily in orientation and application; the backslash leans backward and is predominantly employed in computing contexts such as escape sequences in programming languages and directory paths in Windows operating systems, whereas the forward slash serves general punctuation roles like separating alternatives or denoting fractions and is standard for paths in Unix-like systems and URLs.[94][95] The backslash is not classified as traditional punctuation in prose writing, functioning instead as a typographic mark for technical notation, which contrasts with the slash's broader historical use in separating words, lines of poetry, or dates.[96] Typographically, the slash is distinguished from the virgule, an older form that was more vertical and often substituted for commas or pauses in medieval manuscripts, while the modern slash tends to be more oblique and consistent in slant for separative functions like alternatives (e.g., and/or).[10] The solidus, sometimes specified as a thinner variant linked to ancient Roman coinage notation, is reserved for precise fractional representation in typography, differing from the keyboard slash's general-purpose stroke that may vary in angle but maintains a steeper incline for readability in digital text.[10] These distinctions arise from historical evolution, with the virgule originating as a shorthand comma in scripts before evolving into the slash's current form by the 20th century.[97] In mathematical notation, the slash contrasts with the obelus (÷), a dedicated division symbol introduced in the 16th century for arithmetic operations, as the slash implies a fractional quotient (e.g., a/b) suitable for inline expressions, whereas the obelus signals a separate binary operation often taught in elementary education but phased out in advanced contexts for clarity in complex formulas.[98] Unicode further delineates variants: the standard solidus (U+002F /) for general division or separation, the fraction slash (U+2044 ⁄) as a shorter, centered mark for inline fractions like 1⁄2, and the division slash (U+2215 ∕) for operational division, ensuring proportional spacing and semantic precision in typesetting.[91] This separation prevents ambiguity, as the slash's use in fractions emphasizes equivalence to horizontal bars, unlike the obelus's standalone role.[99]Criticisms and Limitations
Interpretive Ambiguity
The slash's polysemous nature—encompassing disjunction (e.g., "or"), hybrid conjunctions (e.g., "and/or"), ratios, fractions, and delimiters—frequently engenders interpretive ambiguity absent explicit contextual disambiguation.[15][97] This overloading of functions, expanded through informal and technical usages, has eroded the precision of its original significations, compelling readers to infer intent from surrounding prose, which risks misconstruction.[15] A canonical instance involves "and/or," where the slash purports to encapsulate inclusive possibilities but often sows doubt regarding mandatory inclusion of both elements, exclusivity of one, or optional combination, rendering it imprecise for formal discourse.[1] Style authorities consequently urge substitution with enumerated alternatives, such as "A, B, or both," to avert such equivocation.[1] Quantitative notations exemplify further haziness; "50/50," traditionally a fraction denoting equivalence, may now evoke probabilistic parity (a "fifty-fifty chance") due to accreted meanings, particularly in vernacular contexts lacking qualifiers.[15] Analogously, ad hoc pairings like "red/blue" signal alternatives but permit construals of simultaneity (e.g., bicolored items), blurring disjunctive from conjunctive readings.[100] In sequential delimitations, such as abbreviated dates ("5/6"), regional variances—month/day in the U.S. versus day/month elsewhere—amplify cross-cultural misapprehension, a factor prompting stylistic proscriptions in global communications.[95] Such ambiguities underscore the slash's liability to mask indecision as deliberate indeterminacy, favoring circumlocution for unequivocal expression.[101]Overuse and Clarity Issues
The slash is often overused in non-technical writing to signify alternatives or duality, such as in constructions like "he/she" or "men/women," which can appear strained and disrupt readability.[82] Style guides recommend restricting such usage to avoid implying laziness or reducing precision, as the slash fails to convey nuanced relationships like conjunctions or disjunctions that words like "or" or "and" provide more clearly.[69] For instance, "and/or" is widely regarded as poor style in formal prose because it introduces vagueness about whether both elements are required or optional.[69] A primary clarity issue arises in date notations, where the slash-separated format (e.g., 10/25/2025) is interpreted as month/day/year in the United States but day/month/year in much of Europe and elsewhere, leading to frequent miscommunications in international contexts. This ambiguity has prompted recommendations for unambiguous alternatives like ISO 8601's YYYY-MM-DD to prevent errors in scheduling, contracts, or data entry.[102] In legal and technical documents, slashes in lists or ratios (e.g., "A/B/C") exacerbate interpretive problems by substituting for commas or hyphens, potentially altering meanings in clauses where sequence or separation matters.[103] Overreliance on the slash in casual or digital communication, such as URLs or file paths bleeding into prose, further erodes clarity by mimicking computational syntax unsuitable for human readers.[104] Australian and British style manuals advise limiting slashes to measurements, fractions, or abbreviations, favoring spelled-out alternatives to maintain flow and reduce visual clutter.[72] Empirical observations from editing practices note that excessive slashes signal informal or unpolished writing, correlating with perceptions of amateurism among professional audiences.[101]References
- https://proofwiki.org/wiki/Definition:Quotient_Set
