Computer Science, asked by Sayeediqbal4779, 1 year ago

A block of text between two strokes of enter key is called

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Answered by Anonymous
4

Answer:

On computer keyboards, the enter key ↵ Enter (or the return key ↩ return on Macs[1] and most Sun Workstations[2]) in most cases causes a command line, window form, or dialog box to operate its default function. This is typically to finish an "entry" and begin the desired process, and is usually an alternative to pressing an OK button.

The "return" key is often also referred to by many American groups[who?] (and even marked) as the "enter" key, and they usually perform identical functions; however in some particular applications (mainly page layout, word processing and in typewriting), "return" operates specifically like the carriage return key from which it originates. It normally has an arrow pointing down and left (⏎ or ↵), which is the symbol for carriage return. In contrast, the "Enter" key is commonly labelled with its name in plain text on generic PC keyboards, or with the symbol ⌤ (U+2324 up arrowhead between two horizontal bars) on many Apple Mac keyboards.[3]

The enter key is typically located on the lower right of the numeric keypad, and the return/enter key on the right edge of the main alphanumeric portion of the keyboard, between backspace and the right-hand shift (and/or control) key (as well as below the backslash key on keyboards using a standard ANSI / US-International layout).

The return/enter key can have various physical shapes.[4]

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