Keypad

A telephone keypad

A keypad is a set of buttons arranged in a block or "pad" which bear digits, symbols or alphabetical letters. Pads mostly containing numbers are called a numeric keypad. Numeric keypads are found on alphanumeric keyboards and on other devices which require mainly numeric input such as calculators, push-button telephones, vending machines, ATMs, Point of Sale devices, combination locks, and digital door locks. Many devices follow the E.161 standard for their arrangement.

Uses and functions

A computer keyboard usually has a small numeric keypad on the side, in addition to the other number keys on the top, but with a calculator-style arrangement of buttons that allow more efficient entry of numerical data. This number pad (commonly abbreviated to "numpad") is usually positioned on the right side of the keyboard because most people are right-handed.

Many laptop computers have special function keys which turn part of the alphabetical keyboard into a numerical keypad as there is insufficient space to allow a separate keypad to be built into the laptop's chassis. Separate external plug-in keypads can be purchased.

Keypads for the entry of PINs and for product selection appear on many devices including ATMs, vending machines, Point of Sale payment devices, time clocks, combination locks and digital door locks.

Key layout

The first key-activated mechanical calculators and many cash registers used "parallel" keys with one column of 0 to 9 for each position the machine could use.

Mechanical calculators used 10-key input first beginning with the Facit-T in 1932.[1] The Facit had two-rows of digits 24579 and 13068. Olivetti introduced the "MC 4S Summa" with the 789, 456, 123 top to bottom order in 1940.[2] The Olivetti ordering became standard so that the keys on modern calculator-style keypads are arranged so that the digits 0 through 9 increase from bottom upwards with 0 on the lowest row and 123 on the next row increasing from left to right. There is no standard for the layout of the four arithmetic operations, the decimal point equal sign or other more advanced mathematical functions on the keypad of a calculator.

The invention of the Push-button telephone keypad is attributed to John E. Karlin, an industrial psychologist at Bell Labs in Murray Hill, NJ.[3][4] On a telephone keypad, the numbers 1 through 9 are arranged from left to right, top to bottom with 0 in a row below 789 and in the center. Telephone keypads also have the special buttons labelled * (star) and # (octothorpe, number sign, "pound", "hex" or "hash") on either side of the zero key. The keys on a telephone may also bear letters which have had several auxiliary uses, such as remembering area codes or whole telephone numbers.

Origin of the order difference

Although calculator keypads pre-date telephone keypads by nearly thirty years, the top-to-bottom order for telephones was the result of research studies conducted by Bell Labs Human Factors group lead by John Karlin. They tested a variety of layouts including a Facit like two-row arrangement, buttons in a circle, buttons in an arc, and rows of three buttons.[3] The definitive study was published in 1960: "Human Factor Engineering Studies of the Design and Use of Pushbutton Telephone Sets" by R. L. Deininger.[5][6] This study concluded that the adopted layout was best.

Despite that, there are several popular theories and folk histories explaining the inverse order of telephone and calculator keypads.

See also

References

  1. Nöring, Christofer. "History of the Facit Calculators". XNumber World of Calculators. Retrieved 27 November 2016.
  2. "Olivetti Elettrosumma 22R and other Olivetti add-listers". Vintage Calculators Web Museum. Nigel Tout. Retrieved 27 November 2016.
  3. 1 2 Fox, Margalit (February 8, 2013). "John E. Karlin, Who Led the Way to All-Digit Dialing, Dies at 94". The New York Times. Retrieved February 9, 2013.
  4. "Monmouth man, inventor of touch-tone keypad, dies at 94". The Star-Ledger. February 9, 2013. Retrieved 2013-02-09.
  5. Deininger, R. L. (July 1960). "Human Factor Engineering Studies of the Design and Use of Pushbutton Telephone Sets" (PDF). The Bell System Technical Journal (July, 1960): 995. Retrieved 7 February 2014.
  6. Feldman, Dave (1987). Why Do Clocks Run Clockwise. New York: Harper & Row.
  7. "Why is the keypad arrangement different for a telephone and a calculator?". How Stuff Works. Retrieved 7 February 2014.

External links

Look up keypad in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
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