What do you call the punctuation marks { and } ?
Braces? Curly brackets? Something else?
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What do you call the punctuation marks { and } ? Braces? Curly brackets? Something else? |
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Begin problem code and End problem code (respectively). |
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{} - chaves [] - colchetes () - parênteses in Portuguese, of course. |
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ref: |
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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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In French, "accolades". |
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In my books (I am from Canada) these are: () = Parentheses 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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In Portuguese, "chaves" |
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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 call those braces, and I call |
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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 name them as follows:
US English seems to have:
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squigglies |
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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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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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Curly braces. [ and ] are brackets or square brackets |
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"Braces" -- to me, "brackets" refers to [ and ]. |
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"Braces". |
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Curly Braces |
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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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"Brackets" |
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"Curly brackets" |
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