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A cursor is a movable marker that indicates a position. The term has been used with this meaning since the 16th century, for a wide variety of movable position markers. On slide rules, a cursor is a sliding glass or plastic plate that has a fine line etched or painted onto it to line up the different scales. Slide rule operation consists of finding a number on one scale and lining it up with a number on another scale. If the scales are separated by any distance, the cursor is used to accurately line them up or read values. On a typewriter, the cursor indicates the position at which the next key to be struck will type. In database packages, cursor refers to a control structure for the traversal of records returned by a query. The term is now most commonly used as a feature of a computer user interface. On CRT character-based interfaces, the cursor was originally (and is still sometimes) a solid rectangle indicating the position of the next character to be typed or the next to be deleted when backspacing or overtyping. On modern computers with a graphical user interface, there are two cursors:
In many computer programs, the shape of the mouse pointer cursor changes when the user's task changes or when it is over a different window. For instance:
de:Einfügemarke es:Cursor nl:Cursor nds:Blinker
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