E
E may refer to any of the following:
1. Short for Enlightenment, E is a desktop windows manager for X Windows created by Carsten Haitzler in 1997. Enlightenment can run by itself or with other desktop environments, such as GNOME and KDE (K Desktop Environment).
2. E with a hyphen is an abbreviation for "electronic." For example, e-mail is short for electronic mail. See our E- page for further information and examples.
3. E is a keyboard key used with the keyboard shortcuts Alt+E, Command+E, and Ctrl+E.
4. E is an abbreviation of an exponent.
5. With the ESRB (Entertainment Software Rating Board), an "E" rating is short for "everyone" and is a game meant for players of all ages.
6. With a regular expression, \e matches an escape.
7. With Microsoft Excel and other spreadsheet programs, "E" is the fifth column of a spreadsheet. To reference the first cell in the column, you'd use "E1."
8. In Microsoft PowerPoint, E is a shortcut to erase all pen tool and highlighter tool marks in Slide Show view.
9. While in the Power User Tasks menu, pressing E opens Windows Explorer.
10. In Adobe Photoshop, E is a shortcut to select the Eraser tool. Pressing Shift+E cycles through related tools, including the Background Eraser tool and Magic Eraser tool.
11. E is the SI-derived symbol of exa.
12. In the phonetic alphabet, "E" is often pronounced as "echo."
13. Euler's number (e) is a mathematical irrational number that's approximately equal to 2.71828 and helps find slopes in Calculus and doing work with compound interest. When working with a scientific calculator, this number can be entered by pressing the "e" button.
14. E is the fifth letter of the English alphabet. The letter "E" comes after "D" and is followed by the letter "F." To create a capitalized "E," press Shift and E at the same time.
With U.S. QWERTY keyboards, the "E" key is on the top row, right of the "W," and left of the "R" key. See our keyboard page for a visual example of all keyboard keys.
If the "E" key is not working on the keyboard, see: Some keys on my computer keyboard aren't working.
In ASCII (American Standard Code for Information Interchange), the uppercase "E" is "069" in decimal (01000101 in binary). The lowercase "e" is "101" in decimal (01100101 in binary).
The number 3 on a phone keypad creates an "E" on a US phone.
Computer abbreviations, GNOME, KDE, Letter, Operating system terms