( https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/24353 doesn't seem to have numeric codes, yet probably they were translated for the benefit of the reader: I doubt "Please send slower!" was transmitted in exactly those characters during a conversation which opened "B m—X n")
EDIT: confirmed: Then followed the figure "4," which means, "When shall I go ahead?"
Several of the ornament endings can be stylized as ---3O-
gpvos 86 days ago [-]
I don't often ask why something is on the front page, but why is this answerless clickbait about something that can be trivially looked up on Wikipedia on the frontpage?
rob74 86 days ago [-]
The article doesn't clear up the mystery, but this explanation sounds the most convincing to me:
> "You had to use something when you were typing because you would write two or three paragraphs on deadline," Harrison says. "Then the copyboy would pick it up and send it to the composing room. It was necessary [to have] some way to say, 'This is it, it's over... Put a head on it and put it in the next day's paper.'"
So it used to be part of an ad-hoc protocol for sending paper messages from your typewriter to the print shop, and the "-30-" was what EOF is today?
Answer: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wire_signal
( https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/24353 doesn't seem to have numeric codes, yet probably they were translated for the benefit of the reader: I doubt "Please send slower!" was transmitted in exactly those characters during a conversation which opened "B m—X n")
EDIT: confirmed: Then followed the figure "4," which means, "When shall I go ahead?"
EDIT: according to http://www.civilwarsignals.org/pages/tele/wurules1866/92code... Nattie's "Please repeat." would've been "R" on the wire, so "Please send slower!" was probably symbolised with equal brevity?
It also gives -13- as "I understand", which makes more sense, as a reply to -12-, than the wikipedia page's entry.
> Today, amateur radio operators still use codes 73 and 88 regularly, and -30- is used in journalism, as it was shorthand for "No more - the end".
For example, check these:
https://www.freepik.com/free-photos-vectors/text-end-divider...
Several of the ornament endings can be stylized as ---3O-
> "You had to use something when you were typing because you would write two or three paragraphs on deadline," Harrison says. "Then the copyboy would pick it up and send it to the composing room. It was necessary [to have] some way to say, 'This is it, it's over... Put a head on it and put it in the next day's paper.'"
So it used to be part of an ad-hoc protocol for sending paper messages from your typewriter to the print shop, and the "-30-" was what EOF is today?