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Command Key

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Command key



 
 
The Command key, also historically known as the Apple key or open-Apple key, is a modifier key
Modifier key

In computing, a modifier key is a special key on a computer keyboard that modifies the normal action of another key when the two are pressed in combination....
 present on Apple Keyboard
Apple keyboard

The Apple Keyboard is a Keyboard designed by Apple Inc. first for the Apple line, then the Apple Macintosh line of computers....
s. An "extended" Macintosh keyboard—the most common type—has two command keys, one on each side of the space bar
Space bar

The space bar, spacebar, or space key, is a key on an alphanumeric keyboard in the form of a horizontal bar in the lowermost row, significantly wider than other keys....
; some compact keyboards have one only on the left.

e's computers up through the 1979 Apple II Plus
Apple II Plus

The Apple II Plus was the second model of the Apple II series of personal computers produced by Apple Computer, Inc....
 did not have a command key.






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Apple Key
The Command key, also historically known as the Apple key or open-Apple key, is a modifier key
Modifier key

In computing, a modifier key is a special key on a computer keyboard that modifies the normal action of another key when the two are pressed in combination....
 present on Apple Keyboard
Apple keyboard

The Apple Keyboard is a Keyboard designed by Apple Inc. first for the Apple line, then the Apple Macintosh line of computers....
s. An "extended" Macintosh keyboard—the most common type—has two command keys, one on each side of the space bar
Space bar

The space bar, spacebar, or space key, is a key on an alphanumeric keyboard in the form of a horizontal bar in the lowermost row, significantly wider than other keys....
; some compact keyboards have one only on the left.

History

Apple's computers up through the 1979 Apple II Plus
Apple II Plus

The Apple II Plus was the second model of the Apple II series of personal computers produced by Apple Computer, Inc....
 did not have a command key. The first model on which it appeared was the 1980 Apple III
Apple III

The Apple III was a personal computer aimed at business users, manufactured and sold by Apple Inc. from May, 1980 until its discontinuation on April 24, 1984....
, where there are two Apple keys, both to the left of the space bar on the lowest row of the keyboard. Two other early Apple computers, the 1982 Apple IIe
Apple IIe

The Apple IIe is the third model in the Apple II series of personal computers produced by Apple Computer. The e in the name stands for enhanced, referring to the fact that several popular features were now built-in that were only available as upgrades and add-ons in earlier models....
 and the 1984 Apple IIc
Apple IIc

The Apple IIc, the fourth model in the Apple II series of personal computers, was Apple Computer?s first endeavor to produce a portable computer....
, also had two such keys, one to the left and one to the right of the space bar; in these models, they mapped to the two different fire buttons of an attached joystick
Joystick

A joystick is an input device consisting of a stick that pivots on a base and reports its angle or direction to the device it is controlling. Joysticks are often used to control video games, and usually have one or more push-buttons whose state can also be read by the computer....
. This allowed for flexible combinations of a modifier key and base key (such as Open-Apple with C for Copy) with just a few extra wires and no ROM changes, since the Apple II could only register one key press at a time (Shift and Control keys were handled in the keyboard encoding hardware which generated ASCII codes). In all these cases, the left Apple key had an outlined "open" Apple logo, and the one on the right had an opaque "closed" Apple logo keys (U+F8FF
U+F8FF

Unicode code point U+F8FF is the last character in the Mapping of Unicode characters#Private use characters. Its meaning and appearance vary depending on the font in use, but its usage in several fonts make it the most notable code point in the private use area....
). The Apple Lisa
Apple Lisa

The Apple Lisa was a personal computer designed at Apple Computer, Inc. during the early 1980s.The Lisa project was started at Apple in 1978 and evolved into a project to design a powerful personal computer with a graphical user interface that would be targeted toward business customers....
 had only the closed Apple logo. When the Macintosh was introduced in 1984, the keyboard had a single command key with a symbol reminiscent of a four leaf clover (U
Unicode

Unicode is a computing industry standard allowing computers to consistently represent and manipulate Character expressed in most of the world's writing systems....
+2318), because Steve Jobs said that showing the Apple logo throughout the menus as a keyboard shortcut was "taking [it] in vain." Thus, the appears in the Macintosh menus as the primary modifier key symbol.

In 1986, the Apple IIGS
Apple IIGS

The Apple , the fifth model inception of the Apple II, was the most powerful member of the Apple II series of microcomputer made by Apple Inc.. At the time of its release, it was capable of advanced color graphics and then-state-of-the-art sound synthesis that surpassed those of most other computers, including the black and white Macintosh ....
 was introduced. Like the newer Macintosh computers to come, such as the Macintosh SE
Macintosh SE

The Macintosh SE was a personal computer manufactured by Apple Inc. between March 1987 and October 1990. This computer marked a significant improvement on the Macintosh Plus design and was introduced by Apple at the same time as the Macintosh II....
, it used the new Apple Desktop Bus
Apple Desktop Bus

Apple Desktop Bus is an obsolete serial communications computer bus connecting low-speed devices to computers. Used primarily on the Apple Macintosh platform, ADB equipment is still available but not supported by most Apple hardware manufactured since 1999....
 for its keyboard and mouse. However, it was still an Apple II. Apple changed the keys on the IIGS's keyboard to Command and Option
Option key

The 'Option key' is a modifier key present on Apple keyboards. It is located between the Control key and Command key on a typical Mac keyboard. For desktop keyboards, there are usually two, while a laptop may have only one to make room for the arrow keys....
, as on Mac keyboards, but added an open-Apple to the Command key, for consistency with applications for previous Apple II generations. (The Option key did not have a closed-Apple, probably because Apple II applications used the closed-Apple key much more rarely than the open-Apple key; thus there was less need to keep it around.) Because any ADB keyboard could be used with the IIGS, all of Apple's ADB keyboards—even those intended for the Mac—also required the open-Apple, and it stuck for more than twenty years even when the Apple II series was long out of production.

The Apple symbol was removed in the keyboard's 2007 redesign, making room for the key's name to appear. In the US, the keyboard now uses the word "command"; in Europe, the word used now is "cmd" printed on the key. The removal of the symbol triggered a small storm of online protests by Apple aficionados who felt that a unique design feature of the Macintosh was being dropped without a compelling need.

Function

The Command key has a single purpose: allowing the user to enter keyboard shortcut commands to GUI applications. The Macintosh Human Interface Guidelines have always recommended that developers use the Command key (and not the Control or Option keys) for this purpose. A small set of shortcuts (such as cut and paste, open and save) are standard across nearly all applications, and many other shortcuts are standardized (Find, Show Fonts). If an application needs more shortcuts than can be obtained with the twenty-six letters of the Latin alphabet
Latin alphabet

The Latin alphabet, also called the Roman alphabet, is the most widely used alphabetic writing system in the world today. It evolved from the western variety of the Greek alphabet called the Cumae alphabet, and was initially developed by the Ancient Romes to write the Latin....
, double modifiers such as Command+Option are used.

One advantage of this scheme, as contrasted with the Microsoft Windows
Microsoft Windows

Microsoft Windows is a series of software operating systems and graphical user interfaces produced by Microsoft. Microsoft first introduced an operating environment named Windows in November 1985 as an add-on to MS-DOS in response to the growing interest in graphical user interfaces ....
 mixed use of the Control and Alt keys, is that the Control key
Control key

In computing, a Control key is a modifier key which, when pressed in conjunction with another key, will perform a special operation ; similar to the Shift key, the Control key rarely performs any function when pressed by itself....
 is reserved entirely for its original purpose: entering control character
Control character

In computing and telecommunication, a control Grapheme or non-printing character is a code point in a character encoding, that does not in itself represent a written symbol....
s in terminal
Terminal

Terminal may mean:...
 applications. (Indeed, the very first Macintosh lacked a Control key; it was soon added to allow compatible terminal software.)

The Macintosh keyboard's other unusual modifier key, the Option key
Option key

The 'Option key' is a modifier key present on Apple keyboards. It is located between the Control key and Command key on a typical Mac keyboard. For desktop keyboards, there are usually two, while a laptop may have only one to make room for the arrow keys....
, serves as a modifier both for entering keyboard shortcuts and for typing text—it is used to enter foreign characters, typographical symbols, and other nonstandard characters.

The ’s origin

1 9 2 30
The came into the Macintosh project at a late stage. The development team originally went for their old Apple key, but Steve Jobs
Steve Jobs

Steven Paul Jobs is an United States businessman and co-founder, Chairman, and Chief executive officer of Apple Inc.. Jobs is the former CEO of Pixar Animation Studios....
 found it frustrating when "apples" filled up the Mac's menus next to the key commands, because he felt that this was an over-use of the company logo
Logo

A logo is a graphical element that, together with its logotype form a trademark or commercial brand. Typically, a logo's design is for immediate recognition....
. He then opted for a different key symbol. With only a few days left before deadline, the team's bitmap artist Susan Kare
Susan Kare

Susan Kare is an artist and graphic designer who created many of the graphical user interface elements for the Apple Inc. Macintosh in the 1980s....
 started researching for the Apple logo's successor. She was browsing through a symbol dictionary when she came across the cloverleaf-like symbol, commonly used in Scandinavia as an indicator of cultural locations and places of interest. When she showed it to the rest of the team, everyone liked it, and so it became the symbol of the 1984 Macintosh command key.

The "" symbol, is known as a Gorgon loop, infinity matrix, or Saint John's Arms
Saint John's Arms

?, a square with loops at the corners, which is sometimes referred to as Saint John's Arms, the Place of Interest Sign, or Saint Hannes cross, is an ancient symbol now commonly used throughout Northern Europe....
 (sometimes referred to as Saint Hannes cross) and dates back to pre-Christian times
Germanic paganism

Germanic paganism refers to the religion beliefs of the Germanic peoples preceding Christianization. The best documented version of the Germanic pagan religions is 10th and 11th century Norse paganism, though other information can be found from Anglo-Saxon paganism and Continental Germanic mythology....
.

The symbol was included in the original Macintosh font Chicago
Chicago (typeface)

Chicago is a sans-serif typeface designed by Susan Kare for Apple Computer. It was used in the Mac OS graphical user interface between 1984 and 1997 and was an important part of Apple's brand identity....
, and could be inserted by typing a control-q key combination.

When used in conjunction with computing the symbol is commonly given nicknames such as '"cloverleaf", "splat", "splodge", "overpass", "butterfly", "squiggle", "beanie", "flower", "cauliflower", "propeller" or "shamrock". Sometimes when used in conjunction with a Hot Key it is called "twiddle". Some believe the symbol to be named the "infinite loop", which is also the address for Apple world headquarters: 1 Infinite Loop
Infinite Loop (street)

Infinite Loop is a street encircling the six main buildings of Apple Inc.'s headquarters in Cupertino, California. Each building has a number which corresponds to its single-digit address on the Loop, and so Apple's official mailing address is "1 Infinite Loop"....
, Cupertino, CA 95014.

On other keyboards

When a non-Apple designed keyboard is present in the Mac OS X
Mac OS X

Mac OS X is a line of computer operating systems developed, marketed, and sold by Apple Inc., and since 2002 has been included with all new Macintosh computer systems....
 environment the operating system tries to map a similar key to the Command key function. On a keyboard designed for MS Windows, the Windows key
Windows key

The Windows key or Windows logo key is a computer keyboard key originally introduced for the Windows 95 operating system. On keyboards lacking a Windows key, Ctrl+Esc can instead be pressed, though some functionality is lacking....
 is mapped to act as the Command key. On a Sun Microsystems
Sun Microsystems

Sun Microsystems, Inc. is a multinational corporation vendor of computers, computer components, computer software, and information technology services, founded on February 24, 1982....
 designed keyboard the meta key
Meta key

The Meta key was a special key on old Massachusetts Institute of Technology computer keyboards, such as the Space-cadet keyboard. Sun Microsystems keyboards continue to include a Meta key, marked as a solid diamond....
  maps to the Command key function.

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