X-Google-Language: ENGLISH,ASCII-7-bit X-Google-Thread: f996b,d8ba9ee032dffd44 X-Google-Attributes: gidf996b,public X-Google-Thread: 113841,2e58d5f13e65ed35 X-Google-Attributes: gid113841,public X-Google-Thread: 102ffd,2e58d5f13e65ed35 X-Google-Attributes: gid102ffd,public From: Randy Gardner Subject: Re: Names of ASCII Symbols Date: 1998/01/15 Message-ID: <34BE6797.4AAA@slip.net>#1/1 X-Deja-AN: 316289299 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit References: <34AE4959.11EE@ares.informatik.uni-ulm.de> <01bd187e$68352060$LocalHost@atkins> <696gls$p0u@clarknet.clark.net> <34BBAC52.6D11@slip.net> <69glbv$slp$1@aziraphale.pet.cam.ac.uk> Mime-Version: 1.0 Reply-To: randyg@slip.net Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Organization: The large stack method (CEO: Rsoft) Newsgroups: alt.ascii-art,alt.usage.english,alt.english.usage Mark Baker wrote: > > <- Right arrow, bacspace, del You A** <- <- <- mean person. > I've never seen that. ^H is more common. I've seen it....... I think it sprang up first on windozzzzz PCs, where nobody knew what ^H was........ -- --randyg@slip.net (Randy Gardner) --http://www.slip.net/~randyg/index.htm - *New* Download a maze program that lets you actually walk *inside* the maze!!