Yôü kñòw, thé tróúblè wîth ÉÑGLISH ïs thërë åìñ’t ñêårly êñóúgh ÄÇÇÉÑTS!
They make everything much more interesting to read.
¿Don’t you agree?
Yôü kñòw, thé tróúblè wîth ÉÑGLISH ïs thërë åìñ’t ñêårly êñóúgh ÄÇÇÉÑTS!
They make everything much more interesting to read.
¿Don’t you agree?
My EYES…they’re bleeeeeeding!
Ha! Never under estimate the cutting power of a newly forged circumflex!
â
Take that!
:collapses:
twitch_twitch
It’s all about ç-çedilla!
Alt+0231 baby!
You’re breakin’ my heart.
And always remember: Fear the Ümlaut!!
Ya can’t be mÖtley without it
Right now, however, you are crÜe-less.
I’d like to campaign for the introduction of a font that includes an “n” with umlauts, for Spinal Tap fans everywhere.
Diacritics suck if you’re a catalog librarian - in order that all systems read all characters uniformly, diacritics are each given their own special code.
So the title “Innocent Eréndira” by Gabriel Marcía Márquez looks like this in a library MARC record:
title: Innocent Er{226}endira
and
author: Garc{226}ia M{226}arquez, Gabriel
More complicated tables can be found here.
But that OP was fun to read. Reminds me of the pretty fractals.
Reminds me of too much Nyquil.
What a crÜde thing to say!
btw, why is there an ä, ë, ï, and ö, but no lower case Ü??
Whaddaya mean, müthafücka? The OP üses one (which I cüt and pasted for my post).
Alt + 0250 = ü
Worked für me.
Stüpid függin Nyqüil fingürs!!!
ALT + 0252 = ü
btw, ALT + 0250 = ú, FTR.
Ahh…there lies the problem…the ascii table I was looking at only went up to Alt-255. Now then…let’s try this again:
What a crüde thing to say!
The tröble is that I’m never entirely sure that a google search will find them if I just type ordinary characters…
It’s even easier if you use the decimal ASCII code instead: ALT + 129 = ü. Saves you one extra keystroke. Of course, this only works for the first 255 characters in the ASCII characer set. One advantage though, is that it should work with most codepages, while ALT + 0250 might display something else if you use a wierd codepage like IBM 855 (Cyrillic).
Oh, oh. I just checked and I’m wrong. IBM 855 only has the first 127 characters mapped to ASCII, so ALT + 129 actually maps to “CYRILLIC CAPITAL LETTER DJE” so forget what I just said. :smack:
You do still save one keystroke though!
Ohhhhh pretty!