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It seems that we only use '\0'(null),'\a'(bell),'\b'(backspace),'\t'(horizontal tab),'\n'(line fee),'\r'(carriage return),'\v'(vertical tab),'\e'(escape).

Where are the other ASCII control characters?Whats the usage of other ASCII contorl characters?Do they still act as control command of printer?

thanks.

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2 Answers 2

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They are all here.

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    I like it how all the +1 and -1 votes fight for the final value of my answer :)
    – lutz
    Jan 14, 2010 at 14:27
  • actually,the wiki page does not answer my question.it says the contorl characters was orginally for device control.so what about now?i could not get the answer.
    – Jichao
    Jan 14, 2010 at 14:31
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    What they mean depends on the device. In many cases most of them now do nothing, but in others they might do something weird and unrelated to their name. Jan 14, 2010 at 14:40
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They were designed for control of terminals really, not just printers. It was pretty common back in the day on 80x24 character terminals to need to hit Ctrl-S (0x13 or XOFF) to pause output and Ctrl-Q (0x11 or XON) to unpause it again. Ctrl-G (0x07 or BEL) make the terminal beep. I suppose that could have worked on a printer too, but it would have to have been a really loud beep to be heard over those old chain printers.

Ctrl-S, Q, and G still work on most shells. The Windows shell doesn't do anything with G, but S and Q work.

CR and LF are of course still used in terminals, although they don't do quite what you'd expect from their printer definitions. On most OSes LF is used to terminate lines. Some old Macs just use CR, and Windows likes to use both.

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