A solidus, oblique or slash, /, is a punctuation mark. It is also called a diagonal, separatrix, shilling mark, stroke, virgule, scratch comma, slant, or forward slash.
This symbol goes back to the days of ancient Rome. In the early modern period, in the Fraktur script, which was widespread through Europe in the Middle Ages, one slash (/) represented a comma, while two slashes (//) represented a Dash. The two slashes eventually evolved into a sign similar to the Equals sign (=), then being further simplified to a single dash (–).
The most common use is to replace the hyphen to make clear a strong joint between words or phrases, such as "the Ernest Hemingway/William Faulkner generation". Yet very often it is used to represent the concept or, especially in instruction books.
The symbol also appears in the phrase and/or, a prose representation of the logical concept of logical disjunction.
The slash has been used as the title of a novel by Greg Bear, / (Slant). The "Slant" was added on to give people something to call the book, but it has ultimately become the accepted title in many book lists.
The slash is often used (incorrectly) to separate the letters in a two-letter initialism, such as R/C (short for radio control) or even w/e (an internet slang abbreviation for whatever). Purists strongly discourage this misuse of the symbol, however, because it could potentially create confusion about its meaning.
The virgule is also used to indicate a line break when quoting multiple lines from a poem, play, or headline.
For a specialized use of the slash in the titles of fan fiction stories, see slash fiction.
The solidus and virgule are distinct typographic symbols with decidedly different uses. The solidus is significantly more oblique than the virgule. The character found on standard keyboards is the virgule and while most people lump the two characters together, (and when there is no alternative it is acceptable to use the virgule in place of the solidus,) they are different. The solidus is used in the display of ratios and fractions as in constructing a fraction using superscript and subscript as in “123⁄456”; the virgule is used for essentially any other textual purpose.
A solidus is used to separate the numerator and denominator in a vulgar fraction, or as a division operator in general.
The special character Fraction slash U+2044, character ⁄ (the solidus or shilling mark proper), can be used instead of a virgule, and is preferred whenever possible. It is also found in many legacy Apple Macintosh character sets. Systems capable of fine typography should display the result as a true fraction with smaller numbers. Unicode also distinguishes the Division Slash U+2215 (∕) which may be more oblique than the normal solidus character.
A leading slash however represents the root directory of the Virtual file system; it is used when specifying absolute paths:
It is sometimes called a "forward slash" to contrast with the backslash \, which is the path delimiter on MS-DOS and Microsoft Windows systems. These operating systems use the backslash rather than the slash because in the early days of CP/M—before directories were supported —the slash was chosen as the command-line option indicator:
Note however that the "forward slash" will be translated into a backslash by most versions of DOS and Windows, in contexts where there is little ambiguity with command-line options. Some people incorrectly refer to a slash as a "backslash", for instance when reading URLs out loud.
In Britain there was a specialized use in prose: 7/8 May referred to the night which starts the evening of 7 May and ends the morning of 8 May, totalling about 12 hours depending on the season. This was used to list night-bombing air-raids which would carry past midnight. Some police units in the US use this notation for night disturbances or chases. Contrariwise, the form with a hyphen, 7-8 May, would refer to the two-day period, at most 49 hours. This would commonly be used for meetings.
The International Standard ISO 8601, in attempting to resolve this ambiguity, introduced problems of its own. According to this norm, dates must be written year-month-day using hyphens, but time periods are written as two standard dates separated by a slash: 1939-09-01/1945-05-08, for example, would be the duration of the Second World War in the European theatre, while 09-03/12-22 might be used for a fall term of a Western school, from September third to December twenty-second.
Note however, that when the Pound Sterling was used in addition to Shillings and Pence that the solidus could not be used as a divider between the two to express the former and latter units, and the more formal style had to be resorted to for the three units, e.g. ₤1·19·11 , i.e. One pound, nineteen shillings, and eleven pence.
N.B. The raised-dot · or ' interpunct ' separating the units: a full stop on the line could be confused with a decimal point, a raised-dot or sometimes even a single dash was more often used ' ₤1-19-11 ', but the latter was better avoided, (see below).
The double-dash ' = ' , in the above table, is used to represent 'nought' (zero). In more recent times before Decimalisation Day — Mon., 15th Feb. 1971 — the double-dash for 'nought' sometimes gave way to a single dash, thus: 10/-, (although this was frowned on in the 1950s and 60s as it gave room for ambiguity with ₤1-19-11 when replacing the raised dot with a single dash. A single dash was also used to express nought when doing columns of sums, which could be potential cause for even further confusion). The double cross bar in the Pound Sterling symbol ' ₤ ' also gave way to the more modern single bar ' £ ' as used by even the Bank of England to-day, (though this was to be seen in the days prior to decimalisation as well).
Before the farthing became defunct in the early 60s, it was worth ¼d. Thus, an amount such as 2¼d. was read ' tuppence-farthing' and 3½d. as thrupp'nce-hap'ney (threepence halfpenny). For ease and simplification of speech ¾d. was expressed as 3 farthing(s), thus: ₤5·19·11¾ would have been read as 'Five pound(s), nineteen (shillings), eleven-three', (farthing being understood). 2/11¾ would have been similarly read 'two (shillings) eleven-three'. 1½d. would likewise be read 'three hap-ney' for ease of speech (i.e. three halfpennies). (The use of the word 'and' when expressing the final unit of more than one unit was generally left out as it could be understood in context, thus: 1/11¾ was read as 'One eleven-three' (farthing), and this was understood in the same way an American would automatically know, for instance, that 'two twenty-five' in context meant '$2.25' and not '$225.00' etc.)
It is this usage (in particular, separating shillings from pence) that brought about the name 'Solidus' in the English language to refer to this character, the character ' / ' again being derived from the long s ' ∫ ' for Solidus when referring to shilling(s). The use of diagonals to express fractions at the same time as the similarly shaped solidi were being used to express shilling meant a need for a means to distinguish between the two and avoid any possible confusion.
So as not to confuse ' / ' i.e. solidus for shilling, when fractions were not available on a type-writer or at a printers, insertion of a hyphen after the whole penny or pence expressed and then the fraction of the penny was sometimes used for clarity. E.g. 2/11½d. could be written out of necessity as 2/11-1/2 as two-shillings eleven-pence hap-ney. However this was often better expressed as 2s. 11-1/2d. or in larger sums, for instance, as ₤5·19·11-3/4 for ₤5·19·11¾. Here again, the dash was better not used between units to avoid confusion: ₤5·19·11-3/4 rather than ₤5-19-11-3/4. However, when super- and sub-scripts were available, they offered another alternative to avoid ambiguity and confusion, e.g. ₤5·19·113/4 (read: five (pounds), nineteen (shillings), eleven, three farthing), 31/4d. (read: thrup'nce farthing), similarly 21/2d. tuppence hap'ney, etc.)
When highlighting corrections on a proof#Noun a copy editor will either write what he thinks should be changed--or why it should be changed--in the margin. He separates his comments with a slash called a separatrix.
In addition, when marking an uppercase letter for conversion to lowercase, an editor will put a slash through it and write lc or l/c in the margin.
Sometimes the slash is called stroke (and oblique stroke) , although that may be confused with the hyphen. Stroke is most commonly used among the North American amateur radio community.
Among American telephone technical support representatives in the computer industry, the double-slash in a URL address is commonly nicknamed "whack-whack." For example, the representative may tell the user to go to a support website: "OK, open up a browser and type in the following address: http colon whack-whack, www dot supportsite dot com." The origins of this slang term are not known but may be related to the slang for the exclamation point (!) which support engineers, especially in password resets, often refer to as "bang." —C.J. Newton, though in (British) mathematics may often be called pling or shreek.
Skråstreg | Schrägstrich | Oblikvo | Barra (ikurra) | Barre oblique | קו נטוי | Schuine streep | スラッシュ (記号) | Косая черта | Vinoviiva | Snedstreck
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"Slash (punctuation)".
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