It's originated from the old typewriters. If you hit the shift key on a typewriter, an other character set became active (the capital letters), so you didn't have to put so many keys onto it. So you could shift between the 2 character set. The funcionality of the key reained the same on modern keyboards too: you can change the active character set.
under the enter key
F13 = {Shift Key}+F1 F14 = {Shift Key}+F2 F15 = {Shift Key}+F3 etc.
If you means this * it's on the 8 key, but you have to press the shift key at the same time.
I don't know what key you are talking about but if you want to do ? you have to hold shift and /
left shift ten the @ key
Each key has an associated code number so the computer can check the number to see which key is being pressed. The Scan Code for the Left Shift key is (on a typical USB keyboard) 44 and for the Right Shift is 57.
it's an "At" key or an "At sign" also known as "Commercial At"
In order to type a star on the computer you will need the following keys, the shift key and the number 8 keys. You will need to hold the shift key and the 8 key and the same time in order to get the star on the computer screen.
Press Shift then press 4 at the top of your keyboard.
Press and hold the Shift key and press the 2 key at the same time.
The shift key on a computer has more than one use. The shift key is used to enter upper case in text as well as some other upper characters. It is also used to perform certain functions in Windows.
The Shift key's primary function is to modify other keys when you hold it down: it changes letters to capitals, numbers on the top row to the symbols you see on the key, NumPad numbers to arrows, and arrows to highlighting.