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    How do I type a carrot into Xterm?

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    les_garten | # 11 | 2010-01-04, 17:55 | Report

    Originally Posted by legoman666 View Post
    I suppose inferring that you meant to copy/paste a caret from some other source is too complicated for you? Jesus ****ing christ, you're all ridiculous.
    Welcome to LINUX! Not for the Thin Skinned!

    Ohh, and you didn't thank the people who helped you educate your ignorant azz today!!

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    bsving | # 12 | 2010-01-04, 17:56 | Report

    Google is fast !!!
    Google the two words: caret and xterm


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    texaslabrat | # 13 | 2010-01-04, 19:30 | Report

    Originally Posted by archebyte View Post
    Press the Blue-Arrow key and then the 'Sym' key to bring up the Symbol window. ...symbols in the third row such as '^', highlight the symbol and press the 'SPACE' key.
    ^^^^^ This.

    And to elaborate, the "space" key is necessary because the caret is one of those characters that can be used both stand-alone as well as an accent to certain letters in some languages (the tilde "~" is another common one, among others). So, basically for those characters that are "dual-use", you have to follow the selection of that special character with what it should accent. In this case, you select "space" as the character to be accented and the caret will appear by itself as a space is not considered a valid accent-able letter and thus it's smart enough to just put in the caret by itself. If you put in another character that is not valid, it will append that character AFTER the caret rather than put the caret on top of it. If you have a valid accent-able character (for instance, "u"), it will put the caret on top of it.

    Hope that helps the OP and anybody else

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    alexreed88 | # 14 | 2010-01-04, 19:44 | Report

    funniest topic on this forum

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    geneven | # 15 | 2010-01-04, 19:57 | Report

    Also, there was disagreement in the thread about what a caret is, besides carrot.

    I call this < a left caret. I call this > a right caret. I call this ^ a little hat! But I think it's an actual caret.

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    qole | # 16 | 2010-01-04, 20:03 | Report

    Originally Posted by geneven View Post
    Also, there was disagreement in the thread about what a caret is, besides carrot.

    I call this < a left caret. I call this > a right caret. I call this ^ a little hat! But I think it's an actual caret.
    Apparently, in this context, they are called "hoinkies".

    Originally Posted by
    ... operators for indicating the redirection of input/output in various command shells. In this context, they are often referred to as hoinkies (singular hoinky) in order to “avoid confusion with other bracket-type operators”.

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    geneven | # 17 | 2010-01-04, 20:15 | Report

    Thanks for the info, though I think I would be guaranteeing confusion if I referred to a hoinky. Isn't that a white guy? (I know, the spelling is different.)

    The idea is to avoid confusion by making it obvious what you mean. I think I'll try to switch to left caret and right caret, as mentioned, and up caret for what I called a caret above. The modifier expresses which way the caret points, pretty good! And if someone wants to refer to the letter v as a down caret, that's ok with me.

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    JosefA | # 18 | 2010-01-04, 20:33 | Report

    The closest I can come to a constructive answer in a thread with a title like this is to suggest that there's a game called Burger Space in extras-testing.

    It's got lettuce.

    HTH.

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    qole | # 19 | 2010-01-04, 20:34 | Report

    geneven: actually, if you, like me, think "hoinky" sounds ridiculous, there's lots of other accepted terms (left and right caret not being among them ) including "angle brackets", "diamond brackets", "chevrons", and "greater than / less than".

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    That One Guy | # 20 | 2010-01-04, 20:34 | Report

    But no Pickles? I don't want it, then.

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