Asterisk edit
extracted from Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia (using Wikipedia Reflection Script)


 

*

Punctuation

apostrophe ( ' )
brackets (( )), ([ ]), ({ }), (< >)
colon ( : )
comma ( , )
dashes ( , , , )
ellipses ( , ... )
exclamation mark ( ! )
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hyphen ( -, )
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quotation marks ( ‘ ’, “ ” )
semicolon ( ; )
slash/stroke ( / )
solidus ( )
Word dividers
spaces ( ) () () ( ) ()
interpunct ( · )
General typography
ampersand ( & )
at sign ( @ )
asterisk ( * )
backslash ( \ )
bullet ( )
caret ( ^ )
currency generic: ( ¤ )
specific: ¢, $, , £, ¥, ,
daggers ( , )
degree ( ° )
inverted exclamation mark ( ¡ )
inverted question mark ( ¿ )
number sign ( # )
numero sign ( )
percent (etc.) ( %, ‰, )
pilcrow ( )
prime ( )
section sign ( § )
tilde/swung dash ( ~ )
umlaut/diaeresis ( ¨ )
underscore/understrike ( _ )
vertical/pipe/broken bar ( |, ¦ )
Uncommon typography
asterism ( )
index/fist ( )
therefore sign ( )
because sign ( )
interrobang ( )
irony mark ( ؟ )
lozenge ( )
reference mark ( )

An asterisk (*) (Latin asteriscum "little star", from Greek ἀστερίσκος) is a typographical symbol or glyph. It is so called because it resembles a conventional image of a star. Computer scientists and mathematicians often pronounce it as star (as, for example, in the A* search algorithm or C* algebra).

The asterisk is derived from the need of the printers of family trees in feudal times as a symbol to indicate date of birth. The original shape was six-armed, each arm like a teardrop shooting from the center. For this reason, in some computer circles it is called a splat, perhaps due to the "squashed-bug" appearance of the asterisk on many early line printers.

Many cultures have their own unique version of the asterisk. In East Asia a character with a similar use () looks like an X with dots surrounding it. This mark looks like the Chinese character for rice: . The Arabic asterisk is six-pointed. In some fonts the asterisk is five-pointed and the Arabic star is eight-pointed.

Contents

Usage

Written text

Linguistics

Historical linguistics

In historical linguistics, an asterisk immediately before a word indicates that the word is not directly attested, but has been reconstructed on the basis of other linguistic material (see also comparative method).

In the following example, the Proto-Germanic word ainlif is a reconstructed form.

Generativist tradition in linguistics

In generativism, especially syntax, an asterisk in front of a word or phrase indicates that the word or phrase is ungrammatical.

An asterisk before a parenthesis indicates lack of the word or phrase inside is ungrammatical, while an asterisk after a parenthesis indicates existence of the word or phrase inside is ungrammatical.

Music

Computing

Computer science

In computer science, the asterisk is used in regular expressions to denote zero or more repetitions of a pattern; this use is also known as the Kleene star or Kleene closure after Stephen Kleene.

In the Unified Modeling Language, the asterisk is used to denote zero to many classes.

Computer interfaces

In some command line interfaces, such as the Unix shell and Microsoft's Command prompt, the asterisk is the wildcard character and stands for any string of characters. This is also known as a wildcard symbol. A common use of the wildcard is in searching for files on a computer. For instance, if a user wished to find a document called Document 1, search terms such as Doc* and D*ment* would return this file.

In some graphical user interfaces, particularly Microsoft applications, an asterisk is prepended to the current working document name shown in a window's title bar to indicate that unsaved changes exist.

In Commodore (and related) filesystems, an asterisk appearing next to a filename in a directory listing denotes an improperly closed file, commonly called a "splat file."

In travel industry Global Distribution Systems, the asterisk is the display command to retrieve all or part of a Passenger Name Record.

In HTML web forms, an asterisk can be used to denote required fields.

Adding machines and printing calculators

Some international models of adding machines and printing calculators use the asterisk to denote the total, or the terminal sum or difference of an addition or subtraction sequence, sometimes on the keyboard where the total key is marked with an asterisk and sometimes a capital T, and on the printout.

Programming languages

Many programming languages and calculators use the asterisk as a symbol for multiplication. It also has a number of special meanings in specific languages, for instance:

Mathematics

The asterisk has many uses in mathematics. The following list is not exhaustive.

The asterisk is also often used, in all branches of mathematics, to designate a correspondence between two mathematical entities represented by a single letter — one with the asterisk and one without.

Mathematical typography

In fine mathematical typography, the Unicode character U+2217 () "math asterisk" is available (HTML entity &lowast;). This character also appeared in the position of the regular asterisk in the PostScript symbol character set in the Symbol font included with Windows and Macintosh operating systems and with many printers. It should be used in fine typography for a large asterisk that lines up with the other mathematical operators.

Statistical results

In many scientific publications, the asterisk is employed as a shorthand to denote the statistical significance of results when testing hypotheses. When the likelihood that a result occurred by chance alone is below a certain level, one or more asterisks are displayed. Popular significance levels are 0.05 (*), 0.01 (**), and 0.001 (***).

Human genetics

Telephony

On a Touch-Tone telephone keypad, the asterisk (called star, or less commonly, palm or sextile2) is one of the two special keys (the other is the number sign (pound sign or hash or, less commonly, octothorp2)), and is found to the left of the zero. They are used to navigate menus in Touch-Tone systems such as Voice mail, or in Vertical service codes.

E-mail, Usenet, IM

Alice sings a song
Bob: Nice! ***********
Alice: What do yuo think
Alice: *you
Bob: Wht,
Bob: Wha?*

Note that because Bob wishes to correct himself again, he may decide to use two asterisks to show that his first correction was in reality, not correct.

Bob: What?**

Cricket

Economics

Education

Games

Baseball

Competitive sports and games

Barry Bonds

Fans critical of Barry Bonds, who has been accused of using performance-enhancing drugs during his baseball career, invoked the asterisk notion as he approached and later broke Hank Aaron's career home run record.5 After Bonds hit his record-breaking 756th home run on August 7, 2007, fashion designer and enterpreneur Marc Ecko purchased the home run ball from the fan who caught it, and ran a poll on his Web site to determine its fate. On September 26, Ecko revealed on NBC's "Today Show" that the ball will be branded with an asterisk and donated to the Baseball Hall of Fame. The ball, marked with a die-cut asterisk, was finally delivered to the hall on July 2, 2008 after Marc Ecko unconditionally donated the artifact rather than loaning it to the hall as originally intended.

Horse Racing

Pop Culture

See also: Asterisk (disambiguation)

Encodings

See also: Character encoding

The Unicode standard states that the asterisk is distinct from the Arabic five pointed star (U+066D), the asterisk operator (U+2217), and the heavy asterisk (U+2731).6

The symbols are compared below (the display depends on your browser's font).

Asterisk Heavy Asterisk Small Asterisk Full Width Asterisk Open Centre Asterisk
*
Math/Low Asterisk Arabic star Japanese "rice" star Teardrop-Spoked Asterisk Sixteen Pointed Asterisk
٭
  Unicode Decimal UTF-8 HTML Displayed
Asterisk U+002A &#42; 2A   *
Small Asterisk U+FE61 &#65121; EF B9 A1  
Full Width Asterisk U+FF0A &#65290; EF BC 8A  
Asterisk Operator (Math Asterisk) U+2217 &#8727; E2 88 97 &lowast;
Heavy Asterisk U+2731 &#10033; E2 9C B1  
Open Centre Asterisk U+2732 &#10034; E2 9C B2  
Eight Spoked Asterisk U+2733 &#10035; E2 9C B3  
Sixteen Pointed Asterisk U+273A &#10042; E2 9C BA  
Teardrop-Spoked Asterisk U+273B &#10043; E2 9C BB  
Open Centre Teardrop-Spoked Asterisk U+273C &#10044; E2 9C BC  
Heavy Teardrop-Spoked Asterisk U+273D &#10045; E2 9C BD  
Four Teardrop-Spoked Asterisk U+2722 &#10018; E2 9C A2  
Four Balloon-Spoked Asterisk U+2723 &#10019; E2 9C A3  
Heavy Four Balloon-Spoked Asterisk U+2724 &#10020; E2 9C A4  
Four Club-Spoked Asterisk U+2725 &#10021; E2 9C A5  
Heavy Teardrop-Spoked Pinwheel Asterisk U+2743 &#10051; E2 9D 83  
Balloon-Spoked Asterisk U+2749 &#10057; E2 9D 89  
Eight Teardrop-Spoked Propeller Asterisk U+274A &#10058; E2 9D 8A  
Heavy Eight Teardrop-Spoked Propeller Asterisk U+274B &#10059; E2 9D 8B  
Arabic star U+066D &#1645; D9 AD   ٭
Japanese "Rice" Star U+203B &#8251; E2 80 BB  
Tag Asterisk U+E002A &#917546; F3 A0 80 AA   -

See also

References

  1. ^ Complex Conjugate - from Wolfram MathWorld
  2. ^ a b US patent 3920926
  3. ^ Baseball Almanac - Scoring Baseball: Advanced Symbols
  4. ^ See e.g. Allen Barra (2007-05-27). "An Asterisk is very real, even when it's not", New York Times. 
  5. ^ See e.g. Michael Wilbon (2004-12-04). "Tarnished records deserve an Asterisk", Washington Post, p. D10. 
  6. ^ Detailed descriptions of the characters The ISO Latin 1 character repertoire