keyboard. It has the following alphabet arrangement twice, once for lower case (the black keys) and once for upper case (the white keys), with the keys in the middle for numbers and symbols:
etaoin / shrdlu / cmfwyp / vbgkqj / xz The phrase has gained enough notability to appear outside typography, including:
Computing •
SHRDLU was used in 1972 by
Terry Winograd as the name for an early artificial-intelligence system in
Lisp. • The ETAOIN SHRDLU Chess Program was written by Garth Courtois, Jr. for the Nova 1200 mini-computer, competing in the 6th and 7th ACM North American Computer Chess Championship 1975 and 1976. •
Etienne Shrdlu was used as the name of a character in
Mavis Beacon Teaches Typing, touch-typing training software from the late 1980s.
Media • Variations of
etaoin shrdlu are used as character names in many works, including
Elmer Rice's 1923 play
The Adding Machine,
Thomas Pynchon's early short story
The Secret Integration (1962),
Max Shulman's 1944 book
Barefoot Boy with Cheek,
Charles G. Finney's 1935
The Circus of Dr. Lao, and
The Black Hole Travel Agency novels by
Jack McKinney. • Variations of
etaoin shrdlu are used in the titles of some works, including "Etaoin Shrdlu", a 1942 short story by
Fredric Brown about a sentient Linotype machine (a sequel, "Son of Etaoin Shrdlu", was written by others in 1981); and
The Best of Shrdlu, a collection by Denys Parsons of humorous misprints and double meanings from newspapers that Parsons ascribed to a mischievous character named
Gobfrey Shrdlu, referring to collectors of them as
Shrdlologists. • Three pieces in
The New Yorker magazine were published in 1925 under the
pen name Etain Shrdlu. At least one piece in
The New Yorker magazine had
Etaoin Shrdlu in the title. •
Douglas R. Hofstadter's
Gödel, Escher, Bach: An Eternal Golden Braid includes a chapter titled "SHRDLU, Toy of Man's Designing", which features a character named
Eta Oin using a computer program
SHRDLUa reference to
Terry Winograd's program and Bach's "
Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring". •
Etaoin Shrdlu is the name of a character in at least two
Robert Crumb comic stories, including
Weirdo. • "Eotain" and "Shurdlu", using these spellings, are the names of two characters who make sporadic joint appearances in
Phil Foglio's webcomic
Girl Genius. •
Etaoin and
Shrdlu both appear frequently in the drawings of
Emile Mercier as place names, racehorses' names, and people's names. • The French equivalent,
Elaoin Sdrétu, appears in
André Franquins
"Noël et l'Elaoin" (1978). • The rogue-like video game
NetHack uses randomized names for unidentified magic scrolls; one of these names is
ETAOIN SHRDLU. • "Molten
Fairies: Sprites of a Newspaper", featuring Etaoin, Shrdlu, and Cmfwyp, appeared in Perth's "The Daily News" in 1922. •
James Schmitz uses the sequence as a swear word in several of his pieces.
Music • Shrdlu (Norman Shrdlu) is listed as the composer of "Jam Blues", cut 1 on the 1951 Norman Granz–produced jazz album released in 1990 as
Charlie Parker Jam Session. This appears to be a joke on Granz's part as Norman Shrdlu is credited in several Parker (and other) tunes that are jam sessions rather than compositions. • "Etaoin Shrdlu" is the title of the first song on
Cul de Sac's 1999 album
Crashes to Light, Minutes to Its Fall. • "Etaoin" and "Shrdlu", written and performed by Dallas Roberts, are original musical pieces created for the soundtrack of the U.S. television series
House of Cards, Season 2, Episode 10. ==See also==