Hi, here's an interesting read. Enjoy!
THE ORIGINS OF CTRL+C, CTRL+V, CTRL+X, AND CTRL+Z EXPLAINED
BYBENJ EDWARDS UPDATED MAY 23, 2022
The secret origins of your favorite keyboard shortcuts
We use them dozens of times a day: The Ctrl+Z, Ctrl+X, Ctrl+C, and
Ctrl+V shortcuts that trigger Undo, Cut, Copy, and Paste. But where did
they come from, and why does Windows use those particular keys for those
functions? We'll explain.
It Goes Way Back to Apple
The story of Ctrl+Z, Ctrl+X, Ctrl+C, and Ctrl+V shortcuts for Undo, Cut,
Copy, and Paste in Windows goes back to the very early 1980s. The
earliest ancestor of these shortcuts appeared on the Apple Lisa computer
in 1983. The Lisa was a precursor of the Macintosh and Apple's first
mouse-based computer.
eveloping the user interface for the Lisa, Apple programmer Larry Tesler
chose to use the Z, X, C, and V keys in conjunction with the Lisa's
Apple key to represent Undo, Cut, Copy, and Paste. Together, they made
Apple+Z, Apple+X, Apple+C, and Apple+V. In a circa-2016 email to Dr.
Brad A. Myers of Carnegie Mellon University, Tesler described exactly
why he chose those specific letters:
The Lisa was the first system to assign XCVZ to cut, copy, paste and
undo (shifted with the "apple" key). I chose them myself. X was a
standard symbol of deletion. C was the first letter of Copy. V was an
upside down caret and apparently meant Insert in at least one earlier
editor.
Z was next to X, C and V on the U.S. QWERTY keyboard. But its shape also
symbolized the "Do-Undo-Redo" triad: top rightward stroke = step
forward; middle leftward stroke = step back; bottom rightward stroke =
step forward again.
Tesler also notes that the Apple+Z key originally served as both an Undo
and a Redo key---instead of the multi-step Undo we now know today (with
Ctrl+Y usually being Redo on Windows), which makes his symbolic
explanation of the letter "Z" for Undo make more sense.
Obviously, these keys are also handy in that they are located in the
lower-left corner of the keyboard near meta keys such as Apple (on the
Lisa), Command (on the Mac), and Control (on PCs). So if you're using a
computer's mouse with your right hand, you can quickly trigger these
frequently-used functions with your left hand.
When Apple developed the Macintosh, it brought forward the Lisa's
Z/X/C/V keyboard shortcuts but adapted them for the Command key that was
unique to the Mac platform. So on a Mac in 1984, as with today, you'd
press Command+Z for Undo, Command+X for Cut, Command+C for Copy, and
Command+V for paste.
It's worth noting that while the Apple Lisa introduced the Z/X/C/V
shortcuts, the actual concepts for Undo, Cut, Copy and Paste originated
earlier with interfaces for software developed for the Xerox Alto in the
1970s.
THE SHORTCUTS COME TO WINDOWS
At the dawn of the Graphical User Interface (GUI) era for Microsoft,
Apple licensed some elements of the Macintosh OS to Microsoft for
Windows 1.0, but Redmond took care to not exactly duplicate the
Macintosh interface. It's probably no surprise then that between Windows
1.0 and Windows 3.0, Microsoft originally assigned different shortcuts
for Undo, Cut, Copy and Paste than the ones most people use today:
* Undo: Alt+Backspace
* Cut: Shift+Delete
* Copy: Ctrl+Insert
* Paste: Shift+Insert
Windows still supports these legacy shortcuts (and some people still
love using them). At some point during the development of Windows 3.1,
Microsoft brought Ctrl+Z, Ctrl+X, Ctrl+C, and Ctrl+V to Windows as well.
They had already appeared Word for Windows 2.0 in 1991, and possibly
other Windows Office apps.
We asked former Microsoft VP Brad Silverberg the reason for including
these new shortcuts in Windows 3.1, and he recalls that the Windows team
might have been trying to be consistent with Office apps, some of which
originated on the Macintosh. They were also more user-friendly: "I liked
ZXVC better---easier to remember, and it seemed like a good idea," says
Silverberg.
PC Magazine noticed the new shortcuts in its 1992 review of Windows 3.1
and called the decision "one of the more controversial changes made in
this upgrade." But from what we can tell, there was never any kind of
mass protest over adopting these shortcuts into Windows. "I don't think
they were all that controversial and were adopted very quickly," recalls
Silverberg.
It all worked out well in the end. Since 1992, every desktop version of
Windows has included the Ctrl+Z, Ctrl+X, Ctrl+C, and Ctrl+V shortcuts
for Undo, Cut, Copy, and Paste. It's a legacy that goes all the way back
to 1983. Happy editing!
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