In computing, a Control key is a key which, when pressed in conjunction with another key, will perform a special operation. The Control key is a modifier key; it is used in the same fashion as the Shift key. Like the Shift Key, it is unusual for the control key to do anything when pressed by itself. The control key is located on or near the bottom left side of most keyboards. It is usually labeled Ctrl, but sometimes Control or Ctl is seen, and it can be graphically represented as an “up arrowhead” (U+2303, ), or simulated with a caret (^).
Note that using the Control key with either lowercase c or uppercase C will generate the same ASCII code on a teletypewriter because holding down the control key grounds (zeros the voltage on) the 2 wires used to carry the leftmost 2 bits from the keyboard. In modern computers the interpretation of keypresses is generally left to the software, modern keyboards distinguish each physical key from every other and report all keypresses and releases to the controlling software. This additional flexibility is not often taken advantage of and it usually does not matter, for example, whether the control key is pressed in conjunction with an upper or a lower case character.
When the original purpose of the ASCII control characters became either obsolete or seldom used, later software appropriated the Control key combinations for other purposes.
| ^C | Traditional notation |
| C-c | Emacs notation |
| CTRL-C | Old Microsoft notation |
| Ctrl+C | New Microsoft notation |
| Ctrl+A | Select all |
| Ctrl+N | New (window, document, etc.) |
| Ctrl+O | Open |
| Ctrl+S | Save |
| Ctrl+P | |
| Ctrl+X | Cut |
| Ctrl+C | Copy |
| Ctrl+V | Paste |
| Ctrl+F | Find (usually a small piece of text in a larger document) |
| Ctrl+Z | Undo (Ctrl+Y is normal for Redo, if it exists) |
| Ctrl+B | Bold |
| Ctrl+I | Italic |
| Ctrl+U | Underline |
Apple Macintosh also has a Control key, but it has different functionality.
Strg | Touche CTRL | Control key | Control | コントロールキー
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"Control key".
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