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If there are two keywords then they must have their own meanings. So I want to know what makes them different and what their code is.

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5 Answers 5

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A line feed means moving one line forward. The code is \n.
A carriage return means moving the cursor to the beginning of the line. The code is \r.

Windows editors often still use the combination of both as \r\n in text files. Unix uses mostly only the \n.

The separation comes from typewriter times, when you turned the wheel to move the paper to change the line and moved the carriage to restart typing on the beginning of a line. This was two steps.

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  • 29
    you'd think even old typewriters should have thought about making \n represent two steps.
    – ColacX
    Commented Jul 30, 2014 at 18:47
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    @ColacX It is often useful to perform a carriage return without a line feed when overwriting the text on the current line is desired. This applies to both typewriters and terminals. Commented Dec 29, 2014 at 20:06
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    So, in Windows, the proper sequence for the end of a line would look like \n\r?
    – Delfino
    Commented Apr 7, 2015 at 3:25
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    @Delfino not really. On mechanical printers, it made sense to initiate a carriage return earlier, since it's slower, and feed the line while the carriage is still moving. Commented Apr 15, 2015 at 10:31
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    Do not forget that older Macs used only \r
    – Envite
    Commented Jun 11, 2018 at 14:16
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In very layman language Enter key press is combination of carriage return and line feed.

Carriage return points the cursor to the beginning of the line horizontally and Line feed shifts the cursor to the next line vertically. Combination of both gives you the new line (\n) effect.

Reference: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carriage_return#Computers

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  • Also, it become the difference between breaking line and breaking paragraph when computers replaced typewriters - text processing.
    – Gustavo
    Commented Apr 24, 2017 at 22:58
  • This seems to be talking about Windows only. It's sort of correct for Unix-like systems, but text files only contain the newline character, \n, which appears as a newline + carriage return when displaying it on the screen.
    – wjandrea
    Commented Dec 31, 2020 at 3:34
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Both of these are primary from the old printing days.

Carriage return is from the days of the teletype printers/old typewriters, where literally the carriage would return to the next line, and push the paper up. This is what we now call \r.

Line feed LF signals the end of the line, it signals that the line has ended - but doesn't move the cursor to the next line. In other words, it doesn't "return" the cursor/printer head to the next line.

For more sundry details, the mighty Wikipedia to the rescue.

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    I believe the carriage return refers to moving to the beginning of the same line, rather than moving to the next line. The typewriter analogy refers to both moving down to the next line vertically (line feed) and returning to the beginning of the line horizontally (carriage return). en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carriage_return
    – Feckmore
    Commented Jan 17, 2015 at 15:53
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Both "line feed' (0x0A or 10) and 'carriage return' (0x0D or 13) are single-byte values. These values are the accepted standard for LF/CR. Most languages will type these as 'characters.' You can find these values on any standard ASCII table.

For example, in C# a string such as:

String str = "\n\r";

is two characters long (ignoring the hidden end null character '0x00' required in string types). However, you could make an equivalent array of type character such as:

char[] c = new char[](){0x0A,0x0D}; // LF, CR
0

Each of these designates a control character used to trigger a manual line break (newline). The fact that there are 2 is historical, from the old days of typewriters and then teletype printers, back when pages were printed character-by-character, each line from left to right.

A carriage return (CR) represents moving the sheet of paper to the right; in other words returning the cursor to the beginning of the line. In ASCII (and Unicode), CR has code point 13 (0x0D).

A line feed (LF) represents moving the sheet of paper up; in other words moving the cursor down by 1 line. In ASCII (and Unicode), CR has code point 10 (0x0A).

Historically (due to print timings reasons), various protocols and encodings represented newlines using more than 1 control character. To represent a newline in a raw text file (.txt, .html, .php for example), Microsoft Windows (influenced by CP/M) uses a sequence which contains both (CR+LF), which is most correct historically, but suboptimal storage-wise. Other operating systems adopted more optimal conventions, but unfortunately different ones, most importantly just LF on Unix, and just CR on Macintosh. These differences have persisted to this day.

To summarize, nowadays, both can represent a newline, but it depends on context (mostly on the operating system).

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