Nice find!!! “Reserved”? Bah.
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I still think it's a misunderstood "£", the way the extra "I" at the lower right seems to be a misunderstood "!"
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New theory: This key was added before Shift for aesthetic reasons, then Shift was added, and then someone realized this key is kind of pointless with lowercase r present elsewhere. Similarly to the very, very superfluous Deutsche Mark key here:pic.twitter.com/aY9Uk4g4rc
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It's still a shifted character, though, unless this hypothetical missing link had a punctuation row instead of a digits row
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The theory posits it was unshifted before, and someone just liked it aesthetically. (Same with the opening/closing quotation marks.) Then other people or market forces requested more punctuation, and those – and the tricolon – were first to go.
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What was the aesthetics? To have a superscript r. for abbreviations like Mr.?
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Usually because something was typed so often, it would reduce keystrokes and take up less space. I suppose if you typed Cr. and Dr. 1,000 times a day, halving the stroke would be useful?
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I think the suggestion was that it could be a nice superscript, like the o. in numero, or some of the French ordinals?
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Ah. Yes. Like the way schoolgirls draw hearts instead of the tittle for the lowercase i. Plus it does save a bit of typing. I liked the theory it was connected with the £ or another financial abbreviation, because they shared that key—but there’s no association I can find.
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I wonder if it's the same character as Hammond's mysterious shift-F https://patentimages.storage.googleapis.com/40/a4/9d/ec982861bf791b/US290419.pdf …pic.twitter.com/bfTGe2XqYy
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Interesting. It’s in manuals also, but otherwise it often looks like a pound. I don’t imagine it’s an early version of ¤ – a generic currency symbol?pic.twitter.com/wqiHv2JWuX
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That’s the “per” symbol, no? (from CMOS, 14th ed.)pic.twitter.com/b2G3xFnnmk
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!!!! cc
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