Special characters
Hello people, I saw a couple threads about "boxes with numbers and letters inside" (for example, "why do sometimes text symbols appear as boxes with numbers/letters in them" and "Boxes with numbers and letters show instead of certain images on some websites"). I am using a chat service, and when my counterpart sends me some emoticons, instead of the emoticon I see the little square with HEX digits inside. The interesting part is that if I "brutally" copy-and-paste the little square, and send it over the chat, my counterpart actually sees the original emoticon! Ok, that's interesting, but my question is not about the fact that I can't see the emoticon. Actually, I wish to carry out a similar operation with control characters. More specifically, I need to send the BEL character (ASCII 7) over the chat, in order to beep my counterpart's computer, and vice versa. I already tried to type [CTRL+G] in the outbox of the chat, but it doesn't work, because instead of seeing the "^G" output that I expected, the "Find" bar is invoked... curiously, "Find" should pop up with [CTRL+F], so it seems that [CTRL+F] and [CTRL+G] do have exactly the same effect! o_O Similarly, since my counterpart often accesses the chat with an iPhone instead of PC, I think that the [CTRL+G] key combination is not suitable for the scope of beeping my computer. So I'm wondering whether there's a way to actually obtain a "somehow-visible" character corresponding to ASCII 7 that can be copied-pasted and sent over a chat, in order to "beep" one's computer. If I could somehow get a "little box with numbers in it" corresponding to "BEL"... =^_^= Thank you! :o)
All Replies (6)
Type about:preferences#content<enter> in the address bar. Across from fonts and colors, press the Advanced button. On the bottom, turn on Allow Web Sites To Choose Their Own.
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I don't think that you can send control characters like a bell. Control sequences like that have an internal action. Ctrl F (find) and Ctrl G (find next) are used for the find bar.
You would have to install a font that covers the Unicode emoticon range. On Windows XP it is not likely that you have such a font.
Mmmm... okay, maybe I tried to explain my problem beginning from a bit too far. I used the "little square with Hex numbers inside" thing as an example, but actually I am not interested in displaying all the lips, kisses, hearts etc... I just wish to find a way to encode ASCII 7 and send it over a chat. I saw that I can copy/paste the "little squares with Hex numbers inside" from a chat to Word or Wordpad, and copy/paste them back again from Word to chat, and my counterpart actually sees the little faces even though I can't. So I am wondering whether it was possible to "build" a "little square with numbers inside" corresponding to any given value: ASCII 7, in my case.
This should be such a bell character: [?] ("" = ) Note that the character is there as you can see if you open the Inspector, but likely isn't displayed.
Ezalaki modifié
cor-el said
This should be such a bell character: [?] ("" = ) Note that the character is there as you can see if you open the Inspector, but likely isn't displayed.
Cor-el, thank you SO much for your effort... but it doesn't work! :o( I tried sending it to the counterpart, and vice versa, but nothing beeped... :o( it's so frustrating!
(BTW, how could you encode all the arglebargle within round brackets into what looks like just a pair of square brackets?... Just a curiosity, nothing to do with my main question)
I just pasted that content there. Try to paste "" in a reply and do a preview. You can get any character that way by using its entity hex code replacement.