You're viewing a single thread.
๐ฅ โโ ๐ ๐
๐ ๐ โ ๐ฃ ๐
193 0 ReplyWhat is this wizardry?
49 0 Reply๐๐๐ the wonders of unicode / utf-8
it the reason why you can post in any imaginable writing system from ancient sumerian complaints in cuneiform ๐๐ ๐พ๐ข๐ to the goddamn seraphim o "ัะตัะฐัะธะผะธ ะผะฝะพะณะพ๊ฎาัะธััะธา" that was used exactly once in a single 15century manuscript.
its also the reason you can post emojis nearly anywhere.
59 1 ReplyYeah, UTF-8 is great, but ASCII had a character that made a sound.
26 0 ReplyI'm intrigued. Do elaborate.
6 0 ReplyLikely talking about the bell character .
13 0 Reply๐
7 0 ReplyI tried to click that ๐
4 0 ReplyI tried to click that despite reading that you tried to click that and eye rolled at your self
2 0 Reply
BEL is alive and well in unicode: https://unicodeplus.com/U+0007
6 0 ReplyWe need an emoji that says "bruh" then.
3 0 Reply
The first 127 or 255 characters of UTF-8 are just ASCII if I'm not mistaken, for backwards compatibility with ASCII-based systems
1 0 Reply
How dare you write the name of a man who sells inferior copper!
15 0 ReplyI love that we have so much type of o-s. These are all different characters:
oะพฮฟึ ๐๐๐๐พ๐ธ
15 0 Replythat was used exactly once
Similar to how it had every Japanese village name, including some which never existed
3 0 Reply
๐บ
20 0 Reply๐บ
6 0 Replyyou dont need the Rosetta stone for this one
2 0 Reply
I love how no one has given a precise answer to this question:
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Egyptian_Hieroglyphs_(Unicode_block)
12 0 ReplyUnicode.
Glorious modern แแฎแแแแแแแแฅแแถ.
11 0 Replyspecclisbing?
7 0 Replyspellcasting
4 0 Reply
This is loss
7 0 ReplyOh, now I get it.
2 0 Reply
:.|:;33 1 Reply๐ฐ
1 0 Reply๐๐ค
๐ค๐
10 0 Reply
Ancient Loss
21 0 Reply