<
character> /awlt/ 1. The
alt modifier key on many
keyboards, including the
IBM PC. On some keyboards and
operating systems, (but not the IBM PC) the
alt key sets bit
7 of the character generated.
See
bucky bits.
2. The "
clover" or "Command" key on a
Macintosh; use of
this term usually reveals that the speaker hacked PCs before
coming to the Mac (see also
feature key). Some Mac hackers,
confusingly, reserve "
alt" for the Option key (and it is so
labelled on some Mac II keyboards).
3. (Obsolete
PDP-10; often "
ALT") An alternate name for the
ASCII ESC character (Escape, ASCII 27), after the keycap
labelling on some older
terminals; also "altmode"
(/awlt'mohd/). This character was almost never pronounced
"escape" on an
ITS system, in
TECO or under
TOPS-10,
always
alt, as in "Type
alt alt to end a TECO command" or
"
alt-U onto the system" (for "log onto the [
ITS] system").
This usage probably arose because
alt is easier to say.
4. <
messaging> One of the
Usenet newsgroup hierarchies.
It was founded by
John Gilmore and
Brian Reid. The
alt
hierarchy is special in that anyone can create new groups here
without going though the normal voting proceduers, hence the
regular appearence of new groups with names such as
"alt.swedish.chef.bork.bork.bork".
[
Jargon File]
(1997-04-12)