

When struck on a computer keyboard during text or command editing, the delete key ( Delete or Del), known less ambiguously as forward delete, discards the character ahead of the cursor's position, moving all following characters one position "back" towards the freed letterspace.

On some compact keyboards (for example, the 60-key Happy Hacking Keyboard), the Delete key replaces the conventional Backspace key, and the Backspace function is achieved by holding the Fn key and pressing Delete. The Delete key is typically smaller and less-conveniently located than the Backspace key, and on keyboards where space is limited, for example those omitting the numeric keypad or virtual keyboards on mobile devices, it is often omitted altogether. On a MacBook, the forward delete function can be achieved using the Fn+ ← Backspace key combination or simply Control+ D. On this row of smaller keys, the position of the Delete key is positioned at or near the right-hand end. Many laptops add rows of smaller keys above the Function key line to add keys on a non-standard size keyboard. In other cases, the Delete key is in its original IBM notebook position of above and to the right of the Backspace key. However, sometimes the key labelled Delete performs the Backspace function instead, for example on some Apple keyboards. A dedicated symbol for "delete" exists as U+2326 ⌦ but its use as a keyboard label is not universal.
#DOUBLECOMMAND PC#
The key appears on English-language IBM-compatible PC keyboards labeled as Delete or Del, sometimes accompanied by a crossed-out right-arrow symbol. On many keyboards, such as most Apple keyboards, the key with the backspace function is also labelled "delete". This is because the backspace key also deletes characters, but to the left of the cursor. The key is sometimes referred to as the "forward delete" key. The delete key is a key on most computer keyboards which is typically used to delete either (in text mode) the character ahead of or beneath the cursor, or (in GUI mode) the currently-selected object.
