Text makeup – a tool to decode and explore Unicode strings
(text.makeup)93 points by microflash 3 days ago | 11 comments
93 points by microflash 3 days ago | 11 comments
PaulHoule 6 hours ago | prev | next |
I like the explanations of complex emoji, such as
https://emojipedia.org/artist-dark-skin-tone
who is composed out of four unicode characters. I wish it had unihan data for Chinese characters, say
https://www.unicode.org/cgi-bin/GetUnihanData.pl?codepoint=%...
not so much the cryptic codes but the readings.
microflash 5 hours ago | root | parent |
Feel free to add this request on the repo here: https://github.com/mwichary/text-makeup/issues/new
ezequiel-garzon 20 hours ago | prev | next |
Just in case, from the command line I recommend uni: https://github.com/arp242/uni
pavlov 7 hours ago | prev | next |
Really nice design. This GUI style has a bit of a Smalltalk-80 vibe, with the raster line shadows and old-style fonts.
A tiny observation... The examples box that peeks from the left-hand edge works great, but it's slightly confusing that it's showing the X button initially (when there isn't anything to close yet). How about making this icon initially display as a disclosure triangle (something like a > shape), and then morph into the X when the box is actually open?
lelandfe 5 hours ago | root | parent |
Agreed, love the look and typography. You don't see too many serif fonts in interfaces these days.
PaulHoule 4 hours ago | root | parent |
I did a lot of setting posters in serif type a year ago or so and came to the conclusion that most tools do a horrible job of kerning.
It did not seem so bad to me at any point in the past (making posters for a college radio station in the early 1990s, making posters for the Green Party in the early 2000s, etc.) I don't know if I got pickier or if a patent war caused regressions in most text rendering systems. I figured out how to manually kern in Powerpoint (awkward but I can get great results) and also a bunch of options in Illustrator that improve things but still require a manual kerning to look right consistently.
I look around and don't see a lot of people setting posters with Serifed fonts and I think it may be that people see they look awful and don't have the knowledge or time to do anything about kerning.
lifthrasiir 18 hours ago | prev | next |
While numerous similar tools do already exist, I think an inline annotation is a neat interface and can be leveraged much more. Font requirements, segmentation boundaries, script detection and many others.
OutOfHere 21 hours ago | prev | next |
https://babelstone.co.uk/Unicode/whatisit.html works well for me for this purpose. It shows all the names and code points.
issung 16 hours ago | prev | next |
I never knew emoji variants and stuff worked like that.. Fantastic tool, intuitive interface.
Rendello 14 hours ago | prev |
Great website. I've been using a similar tool a lot lately for UTF-8 work:
qingcharles 17 hours ago | next |
It gets a little tiny bit out of whack with Zalgo text.
e.g., https://text.makeup/#P%CC%B4%CD%82%CC%96h%CC%B4%CC%84%CC%8E%...
edit: in fact, due to all the combining marks it will only paste 14 chars of my text into the box. I originally typed: "Ph’nglui mglw’nafh Cthulhu R’lyeh wgah’nagl fhtagn." into the Zalgo generator and tried to paste that output in.
https://zalgo.org/