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The tough guy's [[ASCII]]. I loved the idea since the start, although it has always been clear to me that it would be a broken system, full of frustrations. | The tough guy's [[ASCII]]. I loved the idea since the start, although it has always been clear to me that it would be a broken system, full of frustrations. | ||
− | It actually works better than you would think. And then you can have fun putting some 👩 or ⛑ or ♛ ♘ ⛔ ☭ ☠ 🍹 ⚕ � etc, etc. in what one likes the most of a computer: plain text. | + | It actually works better than you would think. And then you can have fun putting some 👩 or ⛑ or ♛ ♘ ⛔ ☭ ☣ ☠ 🍹 ⚕ � etc, etc. in what one likes the most of a computer: plain text. |
− | To enter a Unicode character of which you knows the code, in [[Linux]], | + | To enter a Unicode character of which you knows the code, in [[Linux]], in many applications go for ctrl+shift+U and the code itself. |
E.g., ctrl+shift+U+0239 gives you... [[qp|ȹ]]. | E.g., ctrl+shift+U+0239 gives you... [[qp|ȹ]]. | ||
+ | |||
+ | In [[Emacs]], C-x 8 RET. | ||
+ | |||
+ | In [[html]], &#x<u>code</u>; produces the character, .e.g., &#x<span>003D</span>; for instance, produces = which could be useful as the actual = could break a template (such as the [[cite]] one). | ||
+ | |||
+ | In [[Mediawiki]], <nowiki>{{unicode|&#code;}}</nowiki> could be used. | ||
Useful entries to remember: | Useful entries to remember: | ||
− | * [[Greek]] goes from 3B1 (α) to 3C9 (ω) | + | * Non-breakable space (&nbsp;) " " 00A0 |
+ | * [[Greek]] goes from 3B1 (α) to 3C9 (ω), the most popular being: | ||
** 3B2 β (easy) | ** 3B2 β (easy) | ||
** 3B3 γ (easy) | ** 3B3 γ (easy) | ||
Line 22: | Line 29: | ||
** 3B7 θ | ** 3B7 θ | ||
** 3BC μ | ** 3BC μ | ||
+ | ** 3C0 π | ||
+ | ** 3C3 σ | ||
** 3F0 ϰ | ** 3F0 ϰ | ||
** 3C8 ψ | ** 3C8 ψ | ||
+ | * The upcase equivalents 393 Γ, 394 Δ, 398 Θ, 39B Λ, 3A3 Σ, 3A6 Φ, 3A8 Ψ, 3A9 Ω. | ||
* M-dash: 2014 — | * M-dash: 2014 — | ||
* Left arrow: 2192 → | * Left arrow: 2192 → | ||
** There are lot more: 🡢 ⟶ 🡒 🠂 🡒 🡺 (see [http://xahlee.info/comp/unicode_arrows.html Xah Lee] for a list). | ** There are lot more: 🡢 ⟶ 🡒 🠂 🡒 🡺 (see [http://xahlee.info/comp/unicode_arrows.html Xah Lee] for a list). | ||
+ | * You can also generate quite a lot of [https://lingojam.com/SuperscriptGenerator superscript] and [https://lingojam.com/SubscriptGenerator subscript] letters, e.g., ⁽¹⁾, ², ³, ⁴, ⁵, ⁶, ⁷, ⁸, ⁹, ⁰ & ₍₁₎, ₂, ₃, ₄, ₅, ₆, ₇, ₈, ₉, ₀. | ||
+ | |||
+ | == Links == | ||
+ | |||
+ | * https://www.unicodeit.net converts {{TeX}} inputs to unicode. |
Unicode is a crazy thing...
♙♙♙
The tough guy's ASCII. I loved the idea since the start, although it has always been clear to me that it would be a broken system, full of frustrations.
It actually works better than you would think. And then you can have fun putting some 👩 or ⛑ or ♛ ♘ ⛔ ☭ ☣ ☠ 🍹 ⚕ � etc, etc. in what one likes the most of a computer: plain text.
To enter a Unicode character of which you knows the code, in Linux, in many applications go for ctrl+shift+U and the code itself.
E.g., ctrl+shift+U+0239 gives you... ȹ.
In Emacs, C-x 8 RET.
In html, ode; produces the character, .e.g., = for instance, produces = which could be useful as the actual = could break a template (such as the cite one).
In Mediawiki, {{unicode|&#code;}} could be used.
Useful entries to remember: