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A simple way to remember forward/backslash (which I probably read on HN) is the phrase "Backslash is by the backspace"

Edit: This is for the standard US keyboard. A more general way of thinking about it, though a bit more to remember: associate "positive" with "forward", and see that '/' has a positive slope. Or just go listen to a BBC podcast, and let the sound of the broadcaster saying "bbc dot co dot uk forward-slash newspod" resonate in your head.



"Forward slash" is a goofy name anyway. There are:

- "slash": the character you use in English and when typing fractions; and

- "backslash": the Microsoft-slash: backwards, like everything else they do.

Another way to remember is that (at least on US keyboards) the slash is always in the same place (on the same key as the question mark). The backslash, being the oddity that it is, is in different places, depending on the keyboard vendor.


Reminds me of many discussions I would have explaining how to invoke a particular DOS command to people whose MO was "dir" and then violently mashing <break> to allow themselves to page through a large directory.

"File slash" and "option slash" were far less confusing than decoding the secretary's concept of "forward" and "back."


It doesn't really make sense. Given we use a left-to-right and up-to-down, \ can be seen slashing forward in writing direction, starting from the top, and / backward.

Upslash / and downslash \ would make more sense, but this is what we have. My mnemonic is that forward and back are the opposite of what makes sense.


There's no one right way to remember something. I'm glad you found something that works for you!


Backslash is near L-Ctrl on my keyboard. Forward slash is far closer to backspace.

Perhaps a better way would be to think (for L-to-R language users) of the charater toppling "forwards" / or "backwards" \ WRT the text direction.


Echoing parent, in different words:

English is left-to-right. (And gravity is down.)

Is the slash "leaning forward" or is it "leaning backward".


Talking about the BBC: sometimes they say stroke instead of slash, which as an American, really confused me the first time I heard it.


But it isn't by the backspace... in fact it's almost the furthest from it! Probably depends on your keyboard layout though.


I think of them as pipes that are falling over. The backslash falls backward and the forward slash falls forward.


Alt-shift-7 on a Finnish Mac keyboard. Took me a while to find it the first time.


On a UK keyboard, it's by left shift, making slash closer to backspace.




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