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Can anyone explain why the keypads for telephones and calculators are the opposite way round? i.e. phones from the top down being 123 etc and calculators start with 789 at the top. As many of us use both in our working lives it would make sense for them to be the same.I often hit the wrong key because of this. Is there some technical reason? p.s. I now see that this question was posed back in 2002 but no satisfactory answer was given.
No best answer has yet been selected by Dudley. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I don't think 'English & American' is a valid answer; America had phone keypads long before we did.
Computer number pads are based on the keypads of mechanical calculators; I don't know why they had their low value numbers at the bottom, but I assume it they were more commonly entered (?) and they could rest their wrist on the desk, and use low numbers to enter high numbers instead of raising their hand to hit a higher numbre; e.g. hitting 4 twice instead of moving up to hit 8.
The people who operated these mechanical calculating machines were sometimes known as 'computers' because they computed.
Telephones had no connection with calculators, there was no need to have a commonality, and they internationally decided the phone pad layout as it is today.
If the computer key pad order irritates, it should be possible to re-assign the values so they match your requirments.
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