From acbae78a9f5d0903aa8a18fb328f7181fb0ca69f Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: William Kendrick Date: Sat, 25 Sep 2004 06:09:11 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] HTML escape codes are no longer possible with stamps, if I'm not mistaken. --- docs/ESCAPES.txt | 214 ----------------------------------------------- 1 file changed, 214 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 docs/ESCAPES.txt diff --git a/docs/ESCAPES.txt b/docs/ESCAPES.txt deleted file mode 100644 index d1507a743..000000000 --- a/docs/ESCAPES.txt +++ /dev/null @@ -1,214 +0,0 @@ -ESCAPES.txt for Tux Paint - -Tux Paint - A simple drawing program for children. - -Copyright 2003 by Bill Kendrick -bill@newbreedsoftware.com -http://www.newbreedsoftware.com/tuxpaint/ - -February 1, 2003 - February 1, 2003 - - -About Escape Sequences ----------------------- - Tux Paint allows the use of HTML escape sequences in the description files - (".txt" files) it reads when loading Rubber Stamp images. - (See README.txt for more information on creating your own rubber stamps.) - - The escape sequences provide a way of entering hard-to-type ASCII - characters into the text file. The escape sequences Tux Paint supports - are identical to those used in HTML pages on the web. - - A sequence begins with the "&" character (ampersand), and ends with - the ";" character (semicolon). For example: "ï". - - -Using Escape Sequences in Tux Paint ------------------------------------ - To use a string containing escape sequences in a rubber stamp description - file (the ".txt" file that corresponds to the stamps ".png" image file), - the line containing the translated description should begin with the - language's "locale code", followed by ".esc=" and the description text. - - For example, a Spanish translation of a string in plain ASCII might look - like this: - - es=Hola - - A Spanish translation that takes advantage of the HTML-style escape - sequences might look like this: - - es.esc=¡Hola niños! - - - In both cases, the "es" at the beginning of the line corresponds to the - language of the description: Spanish. - (See README.txt for a list of languages supported by Tux Paint, and their - locale codes.) - - In the latter example, the "¡" is an 'escape sequence' that - represents an inverted (upside-down) exclamation point ("!"), which - looks like this: "¡" - - The "ñ" represents an "n" with a tilde ("~") over it. - The Spanish character: "ñ" - - - This example could have been easily done using plain ASCII, like so: - - es=¡Hola niños! - - However, depending on the text editor being used, typing that literally - may not be an easy task. Typing the letters A-Z and punctuation should - never be a problem, though. This is why escape sequence support was - added to Tux Paint. - - - NOTE: Since the ampersand character ("&") is used to denote the beginning - of an escape sequence, it itself must be escaped. Use the sequence "&" - - For example, in plain ASCII: - - xx=This & that - - Should be written as follows when using the escape sequence mode: - - xx.esc=This & that - - - The following is INCORRECT, and will end up truncated to just the word "This": - - xx.esc=This & that - - - -Supported Escape Sequences --------------------------- - Sequence Character Description - -------- --------- ----------- - à à Lowercase a grave - á á Lowercase a acute - â â Lowercase a circumflex - ã ã Lowercase a tilde - ä ä Lowercase a umlaut - å å Lowercase a ring - - À À Uppercase A grave - Á Á Uppercase A acute - Â Â Uppercase A circumflex - Ã Ã Uppercase A tilde - Ä Ä Uppercase A umlaut - Å Å Uppercase A ring - - æ æ Lowercase ae ligature - Æ Æ Uppercase AE ligature - - ç ç Lowercase c cedil - Ç Ç Uppercase C cedil - - ð ð Lowercase eth - Ð Ð Uppercase Eth - - è è Lowercase e grave - é é Lowercase e acute - ê ê Lowercase e circumflex - ë ë Lowercase e umlaut - - È È Uppercase E grave - É É Uppercase E acute - Ê Ê Uppercase E circumflex - Ë Ë Uppercase E umlaut - - ì ì Lowercase i grave - í í Lowercase i acute - î î Lowercase i circumflex - ï ï Lowercase i umlaut - - Ì Ì Uppercase I grave - Í Í Uppercase I acute - Î Î Uppercase I circumflex - Ï Ï Uppercase I umlaut - - ò ò Lowercase o grave - ó ó Lowercase o acute - ô ô Lowercase o circumflex - õ õ Lowercase o tilde - ö ö Lowercase o umlaut - ø ø Lowercase o slash - - Ò Ò Uppercase O grave - Ó Ó Uppercase O acute - Ô Ô Uppercase O circumflex - Õ Õ Uppercase O tilde - Ö Ö Uppercase O umlaut - Ø Ø Uppercase O slash - - ù ù Lowercase u grave - ú ú Lowercase u acute - û û Lowercase u circumflex - ü ü Lowercase u umlaut - - Ù Ù Uppercase U grave - Ú Ú Uppercase U acute - Û Û Uppercase U circumflex - Ü Ü Uppercase U umlaut - - ñ ñ Lowercase n tilde - Ñ Ñ Uppercase N tilde - - ß ß Sharp S - - ý ý Lowercase y acute - ÿ ÿ Lowercase y umlaut - Ý Ý Uppercase Y acute - - þ þ Lowercase thorn - Þ Þ Uppercase thorn - - ¡ ¡ Inverted exclamation - ¿ ¿ Inverte question mark - « « Left angle quotes - » » Right angle quotes - - ¢ ¢ Cent sign - £ £ Pound sign - ¤ ¤ Currency sign - ¥ ¥ Yen sign - - ´ ´ Acute - ¸ ¸ Cedil - ¨ ¨ Umlaut - - " " Quote - & & Ampersand - < < Less than - > > Greater than - - ± ± Plus-minus sign - × × Times sign - ÷ ÷ Division sign - ¬ ¬ Logical not sign - ° ° Degree sign - µ µ Micro sign - - ¼ ¼ One quarter (1/4) - ½ ½ One half (1/2) - ¾ ¾ Three quarters (3/4) - - ¹ ¹ Superscript 1 - ² ² Superscript 2 - ³ ³ Superscript 3 - - ¦ ¦ Broken vertical bar - § § Section sign - ¶ ¶ Paragraph sign - · * Middle dot - - © © Copyright sign ((C)) - ® ® Registered trademark sign ((R)) - - ª ª Feminine ordinal - º º Masculine ordinal - ­ ­ Soft hyphen - ¯ ¯ Spacing macron -