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A commercial at, @, also called an at symbol, an at sign, or just at, is a symbolic abbreviation for the word at. Its formal name comes from its commercial use in invoices, as in, "7 widgets @ £2 ea. = £14". It is also known as: about; ampersat (compare ampersand); amphora; ape; arobase; cabbage; cat; cinnabun or cinnamon bun; commercial symbol; cyclone; each; mercantile symbol; rose; schnable; scroll or scroll-a; snail; strudel; these; vortex; whirlpool; or whorl. Some of these are based on specialized usage, others are visual descriptions.
Modern usesThe symbol's most familiar modern use is in e-mail addresses (sent by SMTP), as in jdoe@example.com. Ray Tomlinson is credited with the introduction of this use in 1972. In the programming language Perl, the symbol prefixes variables which contain arrays, as opposed to scalar values (indicated with '$') and hash tables / associative arrays ('%'). If the code were to be treated as a sentence, this prefix would be the equivalent of a determiner, so "@animals" might be read as "these animals". HistoryA commonly accepted theory is that the symbol is derived from the Latin preposition "ad" (at). The @ is supposed to be a ligature developed by transcribing monks. However no document showing this usage has been presented. A more recent idea concerning the history of the @ symbol has been proposed by Giorgio Stabile, a professor of history in Rome. He claims to have traced the symbol back to the Italian Renaissance in a Venetian mercantile document signed by Francesco Lapi on May 4, 1536. The document talks about commerces with Pizarro and in particular the price of an @ of wine in Peru. The symbol is still called arroba in Spanish and it represents a unit of weight with the same name (1 arroba = 25 U. S. pounds), an old (Antonio Nebrjia, Salamanca, 1492) Spanish/Latin dictionary translates arroba with amphora. Under this view, the symbol was used to represent one amphora, which was a unit of weight or volume based upon the capacity of the standard terracotta jar. The symbol came into use with the modern meaning "at the price of" in northern Europe. "Commercial at" in other languages
The commercial at corresponds to Unicode and ASCII character 64, or 0x0040. ReferencesThis article was originally based on material from the Free On-line Dictionary of Computing, which is licensed under the GFDL. External links
cs:Zavináč da:Snabel-a de:At-Zeichen eo:@ fr:Arrobe hu:Kukac (jel) ja:アットマーク lb:At-Zeechen nl:Apenstaartje no:@ sv:snabel-a
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