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111

answers:

3

What was the original historical use of the vertical tab character (\v in the C language, ASCII 11)?

Did it ever have a key on a keyboard? How did someone generate it?

Is there any language or system still in use today where the vertical tab character does something interesting and useful?

+11  A: 

Vertical tab was used to speed up printer vertical movement. Some printers used special tab belts with various tab spots. This helped align content on forms. VT to header space, fill in header, VT to body area, fill in lines, VT to form footer. Generally it was coded in the program as a character constant. From the keyboard, it would be CTRL-K.

I don't believe anyone would have a reason to use it any more. Most forms are generated in a printer control language like postscript.

BillThor
It could also be use to scroll the screen quickly. Useful in the days of 300 Baud.
Talvi Watia
+1 for the use of the KBD tag, something I never knew existed until now! :-)
Justin Grant
KBD tag was added by Gert G. Thanks for the edit.
BillThor
+1  A: 

It was used during the typewriter era to move down a page to the next vertical stop, typically spaced 6 lines apart (much the same way horizontal tabs move along a line by 8 characters).

In modern day settings, the vt is of very little, if any, significance.

Alex Essilfie
A: 

Microsoft Word uses VT as a line separator, to distinguish it from the normal new line function which is used a paragraph separator.

dan04