Eliminar
Significado del símbolo
The Delete symbol was developed in order to be used in computer terminals, printers, text systems and telecommunication equipment. The main purpose was to signal that some symbol or database ought to be deleted. The symbol was usually put right before that material.
One more function of the Delete symbol was to prevent errors made when entering data or in the process of data transference between devices. If you typed DEL in the data stream, it would mean that the previous section or symbol is to be deleted. This enabled users to correct mistakes without the necessity to enter the whole text from scratch.
Delete is also called Rubout, which conveys the idea much better, since the data was most likely not «deleted» but «rubbed out».
It's true that Delete has an unexpected position in the encoding, not like other Control characters located in the range 0000-001F of the
Latín básico
0000–007F
section. Such a location is due to this symbol's 7-bit code: 1111111. The punch cards data was usually arranged in 7 rows (corresponding to the seven bits of a byte). A hole corresponded to a one, while the absence of a hole corresponded to a zero. Thus, a byte with all ones in its bits could be punched on top of any other.
In case of an erroneous recording, incorrect bytes were overwritten with this character. When executing a program, this character was simply ignored.
Apart from punch cards, this control character was used in some Unix-like consoles as an analogue of the character (Backspace). However, in most operating systems, it had no meaning.
In modern computer systems and applications, the Delete symbol is not used that often. There are other mechanisms and functions to correct typos and errors, such as the ← Backspace or Delete key on the keyboard. However, the U+007F character may still appear in legacy systems or in the context of processing textual data.
Like other control symbols, this one is not presented visually and it doesn't occupy much space on screen or in typing. The block Control técnico 2400–243F has a separate symbol representing the graphic image of Delete. It shows up as the abbreviation DEL (Delete) — ␡ .
El símbolo «Eliminar» está incluido en el subbloque «Personaje de control» del bloque «Latín básico» y fue aprobado como parte de la versión 1.1 de Unicode en 1993.
Sinónimos
DEL.
| Nombre en Unicode | Delete |
| Número en Unicode | |
| Plano | 0: Plano básico multilingüe |
| Bloque Unicode | Latín básico |
| Subbloque Unicode | Personaje de control |
| Versión Unicode | 1.1 (1993) |
| Atajo de teclado | ^? |
| Tipo de soporte de espejo emparejado (bidi) | None |
| Exclusión de composición | No |
| Cambio de caso | 007F |
| Cambio de caso sencillo | 007F |
| scripts | Common |
| Codificación | hex | dec (bytes) | dec | binary |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| UTF-8 | 7F | 127 | 127 | 01111111 |
| UTF-16BE | 00 7F | 0 127 | 127 | 00000000 01111111 |
| UTF-16LE | 7F 00 | 127 0 | 32512 | 01111111 00000000 |
| UTF-32BE | 00 00 00 7F | 0 0 0 127 | 127 | 00000000 00000000 00000000 01111111 |
| UTF-32LE | 7F 00 00 00 | 127 0 0 0 | 2130706432 | 01111111 00000000 00000000 00000000 |
Copia y pega estos códigos para usar el personaje Eliminar en textos de sitios web, redes sociales, mensajeros o publicaciones de blogs.
| HTML | |
| CSS | |
| JavaScript, JSON | |
| Unix, C, PHP, JAVA | |
| Ruby, PHP | |
| Perl | |
| URL-encode |