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Dollar sign - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Dollar sign

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

$

The dollar sign ($) is a symbol primarily used to indicate a unit of currency.

The dollar symbol is the only currency mark defined in the 7-bit ASCII computer character set. Other character sets like Unicode contain other currency signs in addition to the dollar.

Contents

[edit] History

The sign is attested in business correspondence between British North America and Mexico in the 1770s as referring to the Spanish-Mexican piastre. The piastre was known as "Spanish dollar" in British North America, and in 1785, it was adopted as U.S. currency, together with both the term "dollar" and the $ sign.

The sign's ultimate origins are not certain. The most widely accepted explanation, according to the U.S. Bureau of Engraving and Printing, is that "$" is a corruption of the letters "PS" or "PS" (for 'peso' or 'piastre' - especially the former, as each letter could represent each syllable of "Pe-So") written over each other in Spanish. Eventually, the 'P' was reduced to a vertical line.

Another possibility is that it derives from the British notation 8/ for eight shilling, referring to the Spanish 8 reales coin ("piece of eight"), which later became the USA dollar. Others derive it from the Portuguese Cifrão sign \mathrm{S}\!\!\!\Vert.

Spanish Colonial Real
Image of Spanish Colonial Real silver coin, showing PTSI mint mark in lower right quadrant.

Image of 1768 Spanish Colonial Real silver coin, showing PTSI ($) mint mark in lower right quadrant (click image to enlarge).

Still another explanation holds that the dollar sign is derived from (or at least inspired by) the mint mark on Spanish colonial silver coins ("real" or "piece of eight") that were minted in Potosí (in present day Bolivia). The mint mark was composed of the letters "PTSI" superimposed on one another, and bears an undeniable resemblance to the single-stroke dollar sign (see picture). The Potosí mine is generally accepted as having been the largest single silver strike in history. Silver coins minted in Potosí would have been in common use in colonial America, and its mintmark widely recognized.

Earliest usage wrote the sign with a single vertical stroke. For some time, the double-stroke symbol \mathrm{S}\!\!\!\Vert was common, but is now again falling out of use.

[edit] Alternative origin theories

There are a number of alternative origin theories, widely regarded as false, sometimes bordering on the occult.

[edit] From 'US'

That $ is a monogram of U and S, which was used as a mark on money bags issued by the United States Mint. The letters U and S superimposed resemble the historical double stroke "$" sign: the bottom of the 'U' disappears into the bottom curve of the 'S', leaving two vertical lines. This double stroke dollar sign has been used to refer to US Currency. Thus, the one stroke design may have been modified to the double stroke design to represent United States currency. This theory was largely popularized by the novel Atlas Shrugged by author Ayn Rand.

[edit] From a symbol used on the Roman sestertius

That the dollar sign harks back to the most important Roman coin, the Sestertius, which had the letters 'HS' as its currency sign. When superimposed, these letters form a dollar sign with two vertical strokes (the horizontal line of the 'H' merging into the 'S'). This theory is widely discarded, in spite of the tendency of the early US to style itself after the Roman Republic (Capitol, Senate etc.)

[edit] The two pillars in the temple of Solomon

That the two vertical lines represent the two cult pillars Boaz and Jachin in the original Temple of Solomon at Jerusalem. This is based on the theory that Masonic symbols, such as the All Seeing Eye of God, appear on U.S. currency, which they did not in 1785.

[edit] The two Pillars of Hercules, plus the two hemispheres of the Earth

That the 'S' represents the two hemispheres of the Earth and the || represent the Pillars of Hercules. (This theory is in a Danish book about the $ sign[citation needed].) In 1492 King Ferdinand II of Aragon put Gibraltar under the new joined rule of the Spanish throne, he adopted the symbol of the Pillars of Hercules and added the Latin phrase Nec plus ultra – meaning "and nothing further", indicating "[this is] the end of the (known) world". But as Christopher Columbus later in 1492 travelled to The Americas, the saying was changed to Plus Ultra – as there was more out there. This symbol was especially adopted by Charles V and was a part of his coat of arms as a symbol of his American possessions and riches. When the Spanish conquistadores found gold and silver in the New World, Charles V's symbol was stamped on the coins made from these metals. These coins with the Pillars of Hercules over two hemispheres (columnarios) were spread around America and Europe, and the symbol was ultimately adopted by the country that became the United States and by many of the continent's other independent nations. Later on, salesmen wrote signs that, instead of saying dollar, had this handwritten symbol, and in turn this developed to the simple S with two vertical bars.

[edit] From a sign used on the German Thaler

That it derives from the symbol used on a German Thaler. According to Ovason (2004), on one type of thaler, one side showed the crucified Christ, and the other side showed a serpent hanging from a cross, and near the serpent's head the letters NU, and on the other side of the cross the number 21. This refers to the Bible, Numbers, chapter 21.

[edit] Unit of Silver

The dollar symbol was in use in colonial times before the American Revolution. Prices were often quoted in units of silver, as the Spanish "piece of eight" was in common use for payment of goods and services. When a price was quoted the capital 'S' was used to indicate silver with a capital 'U' written on top to indicate units. Eventually, the capital 'U' was replaced by double vertical hash marks.

[edit] First cast dollar symbol

The plaque on the bookshop on the corner of South Street and Church Street in St Andrews.
Enlarge
The plaque on the bookshop on the corner of South Street and Church Street in St Andrews.

According to a plaque in the burgh of St Andrews in Scotland, UK, the first dollar symbol was cast in a type-foundry in Philadelphia in 1797 that belonged to Scottish immigrant John Baine. John Baine had lodged in a house in South Street in St Andrews with Alexander Wilson, the father of Scottish type-founding.

[edit] Use on computers

As the dollar sign is one of the few symbols that is on the one hand almost universially present in computer character sets, but on the other hand rarely needed in its literal meaning within programming languages, the $ character has been used on computers for many purposes not related to money, including:

  • $ was used to define string variables in older versions of the BASIC programming language ("$" was often pronounced "string" instead of "dollar" in this use).
  • $ is used to define hexadecimal constants in Pascal-like languages as Delphi.
  • $ is used to define variables in the Perl and PHP programming languages, and in most Shell scripting languages.
  • In UNIX-like systems the $ is often part of the command prompt, depending on the user's shell and environment settings. For example, the default environment settings for the bash shell specify $ as part of the command prompt.
  • $ matches the end of a line in a traditional UNIX regular expression.
  • $ is used in the TeX typesetting language to delimit mathematical regions.
  • $ is used by prompt command in DOS to insert special sequences into the DOS command prompt string.
  • The syntax of cell formulas in MS Excel and other spreadsheets (which could arguable be considered a sort of programming language) uses the $ to indicate an absolute cell reference.

[edit] Currencies that are not called "dollar" but use the dollar sign

In addition to those countries of the world that use dollars, a number of other countries use the symbol $ to denote their currencies, including, but not limited to:

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  • Cajori, Florian (1993). A History of Mathematical Notations. New York: Dover (reprint). ISBN 0-486-67766-4. - contains section on the history of the dollar sign, with much documentary evidence supporting the "pesos" theory.
  • Ovason, David (2004-11-30). The Secret Symbols of the Dollar Bill. Harper Paperbacks (reprint). ISBN 0-06-053045-6.


Dollars
Current Australian dollar | Bahamian dollar | Barbadian dollar | Belize dollar | Bermuda dollar | Brunei dollar | Canadian dollar | Cayman Islands dollar | Cook Islands dollar | East Caribbean dollar | Fijian dollar | Guyanese dollar | Hong Kong dollar | Jamaican dollar | Liberian dollar | Namibian dollar | New Zealand dollar | Samoan tala | Singapore dollar | Solomon Islands dollar | Surinamese dollar | New Taiwan dollar | Trinidad and Tobago dollar | United States dollar | Zimbabwean dollar
Current, formerly a.k.a. dollar Malaysian dollar
Defunct British North Borneo dollar | British West Indian dollar | Ceylonese rixdollar | Confederate States of America dollar | Danish West Indian daler | Danish West Indian rigsdaler | Danish rigsdaler | Hawaiian dollar | Kiautschou dollar | Malayan dollar | Malaya and British Borneo dollar | Mauritian dollar | Mongolian dollar | New Brunswick dollar | Newfoundland dollar | Norwegian speciedaler | Puerto Rican dollar | Rhodesian dollar | Sarawak dollar | Sierra Leonean dollar | Spanish dollar | Straits dollar | Swedish riksdaler | Old Taiwan dollar
Defunct, a.k.a. dollar Chinese yuan
Conceptual Eurodollar | International dollar | Petrodollar
Fictional Dollarpound
Private Antarctican dollar | Calgary dollar | Disney dollar | Liberty dollar | Toronto dollar
See also Dollar sign | Holey dollar | Slovenian tolar | Thaler
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