¢¾ ¢¾ ¢¾ ¢¾ ¢¾ Practice post ¢¾ ¢¾ ¢¾ ¢¾ ¢¾

Just seeing if I can put symbols in the title.¢¾ ¢¾ ¢¾ ¢¾

They were supposed to be hearts!
¢À

¢¼

¢¯ (¿ I love the ¿. It is such a funny symbol, it imples confusion rather than plain question)

‘ ’ ‚ “ ” „ † ‡ ‰ ‹ › :spades: :clubs: :heart: :diamonds: ‾ ← ↑ → ↓ ™ " & < > [ ] – — ¡ ¢ £ ¤ ¥ ¦ § ¨ © ª « ® ¯ °

h

Unless you’re Spanish of course…
Grim
[sup] Nothing to see here - move along…[/sup]



  |
 _|_
/   \
|ó ò|
\___/

Confused pike.

メインページ

I love Mozilla’s foreign language support, cut-and-paste, and Systran’s translation service. :slight_smile:

Confused pike: <?)))))))<

Dead trout: <+))))))<

No wonder it’s dead - it doesn’t have gills!

Live trout: <°(()))))><

What the heck is PHP do on the reply window?

Well, so PHP adds lines and makes some (but not all) words blue.
But why would that be an interesting feature?

What would help the OP is if instead of just the 4 fonts (ariel, times, courier, century) there was a fifth, Symbol.
That wouldn’t take much to do would it?

The php tag is a variant on the code tag, designed specifically for PHP code. The code tag strips out most formatting and puts the text in a fixed-width font, which makes it easier to post computer code. In addition, the php tag color-codes words based on what they signify in the PHP language. I’m guessing that all the other words in your example are meaningless, so far as PHP is concerned, but that do has some recognized meaning.

Since this board is written in PHP, it makes sense that a php tag would be more useful to the programmers than, say, a c++ tag.

DO is part of a loop structure in PHP (much like C++), in case you’re interested:


do {

  $counter++;
  $arraysum += arrayval[$counter];

} while (counter < 10);

“When you are down and out,
Lift up your head and shout,
I’M DOWN AND OUT!”

Okay, there is Katakana there in the post, but when i quote it is a bunch of symbols and i don’t see a symbol tag.

TEST

and now the katakana is gone. Maybe i have Japanese font tags running rampant on my IE…

Ok, now the katakana is back, and the title has the top half of a square bracket and a katakana SE instead of the 3/4 and whatever the other symbol was.

Tars, the problem is described in the old Irving Berlin song:

::: Anything you katakana do,
I katakana do better :::::

…No you katakan’t
Yes I katakan.
No you katakan’t.
Yes I katakan.

Ah, the memories that brings back.

Don’t you mean Irving Tokyo???
(and it is doing it again today! Maybe i’m turning Japanese!)