What do you call the punctuation marks { and } ?

Braces? Curly brackets? Something else?

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I accidentally call them parenthesis all the time. – AlbertoPL Jul 10 '09 at 14:32
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I call them Fredo and Poochie... but that's just me. ;) – Joe Davis Jul 10 '09 at 14:34
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You too Joe?! Seriously, what were the chances... – Cory House Jul 10 '09 at 14:38
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@cletus - guess you code in VB? – Cory House Jul 10 '09 at 14:39
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The third one is definitely a question mark. – Tester101 Jul 10 '09 at 14:45
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21 Answers

Curly Braces

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This make more sense to me but for some reason I could never get into the habit of calling them braces, I always used curly brackets. – MitMaro Jul 10 '09 at 14:34
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"Curly braces" is redundant :P ("Braces" = "Curly Brackets"). – Yohnny Jul 10 '09 at 14:35
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I like to say "wrap it in curlies". aww, cute! – Johannes Schaub - litb Jul 10 '09 at 14:39
@Yohnny: I agree that it's redundant, but I can't stop myself from saying "curly braces" and "square brackets", even though "braces" and "brackets" ought to suffice – rmeador Jul 10 '09 at 14:53
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These are the only kind of braces there are. "Curly Braces" makes no more sense than "irregardless" does. – RBarryYoung Jul 12 '09 at 3:25
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"Braces".

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The definitive answer. I hate it when someone calls parentheses "brackets". – Steve Guidi Jul 10 '09 at 14:36
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@Steve: America doesn't have a monopoly on the English language. Brackets are parentheses in British English. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bracket#Usage – LukeH Jul 10 '09 at 15:13
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Agreed with 'braces', with the slight addition of specifying opening brace and closing brace (rather than perhaps left brace and right brace): this is also the canonical answer in the list in the codinghorror.com/blog/archives//001133.html (Coding Horror ASCII Pronunciation Rules for Programmers) – mas Jul 10 '09 at 15:21
@Luke: Thanks for pointing that out for us Brits. I would have been obliged to do so anyway! – Noldorin Sep 17 '09 at 18:03
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"Braces" -- to me, "brackets" refers to [ and ].

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"Curly brackets"

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squigglies

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+1 - exactly what I was going to say: "Public int main bracket int arg-see comma char star star arg-vee bracket open squiggly". Note also the use of the one true squig^H^H^H^H^Hbrace style ;-} – ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells Jul 10 '09 at 14:44
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* round brackets, open brackets, or parentheses:  ( )
* square brackets, closed brackets, or box brackets:  [ ]
* curly brackets or braces:  { }
* angle brackets, diamond brackets, cone brackets, or chevrons:  < > or ⟨ ⟩

ref:

-http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bracket

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In Denmark we often call them "Tuborg parenthesis" refering to the shape of the red and white sunshade used by the Danish beer brand Tuborg. There is more information on Wikipedia in Danish and in English.

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I don't know, so I try to avoid calling them anything. I write or type them when possible.

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Why do I like this answer so much... Probably because I have those situations where someone asks why I use those "euh... things, you know... zigzaggy thing... wobbly parentheses", I "curly braces?", "what?", "This?" I type {}. He/she shouts... "yeah, that thing..." – Dykam Jul 10 '09 at 14:34
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I name them as follows:

  • (brackets)
  • {curly brackets} or sometimes {braces} or even {curly braces}
  • [square brackets]

US English seems to have:

  • (parentheses)
  • [brackets]
  • {braces}
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Everything is a bracket to you. :) – Mike Miller Jul 10 '09 at 14:59
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In my books (I am from Canada) these are:

() = Parentheses
[] = Brackets
{} = Braces

Until recently when I was typing on a european keyboard I thought these were standard symbols and everyone called them the same, but now I realize different cultures call them different things, and some keyboards don't even have these on them!

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{} - chaves [] - colchetes () - parênteses

in Portuguese, of course.

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Curly braces. [ and ] are brackets or square brackets

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I call them braces. On many SLR cameras they use this '[]' symbol for the bracketing feature and I've always known '[' and ']' as brackets myself.

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Nothing, they're not available on Italian keyboards.

And yet Italian C-programmers exist. They use trigraphs.

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I call those braces, and I call [ and ] brackets. I consider the terms curly braces and square brackets redundant, but sometimes the redundancy helps avoid confusion, in part because brace and bracket are similar words, easily confused, and in part because some people use braces or brackets to mean parentheses.

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In Portuguese, "chaves"

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In French, "accolades".

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In germany i call them "geschweifte klammer". But not sure whether anyone wants to know? – Johannes Schaub - litb Jul 10 '09 at 15:03
I put it anyway, since "accolade" is an English word too. – H_I Jul 10 '09 at 15:55
In Dutch, it's also accolade, probably French borrowword. – Marco van de Voort Jul 11 '09 at 14:22
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{kapcsos zárójel}, [szögletes zárójel], (zárójel) - in Hungarian. Zárójel means: closing mark. Yes, the opening brackets are closing, too. { - kapcsos zárójel nyitva: closing mark opened, } - kapcsos zárójel zárva: closing mark closed. :) – Vili Nov 25 '09 at 7:04
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"Brackets"

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Most of what I've seen is a combination of either "curly" or "brace". So, it might be called a "curly" or "curly bracket" or "brace" or something like that. Personally, I call them "braces".

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No-one's stated < >

Which I call "inequalities" (if used singularly) or "chevrons" (if used as parentheses).

To me {} are curly braces.

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I would call those angle brackets. – Alex Peck Jul 10 '09 at 15:07
{} = braces [] = brackets <> = angle brackets – muusbolla Jul 10 '09 at 17:23
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Begin problem code and End problem code (respectively).

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