Madam, I'm Adam. ·ɯɐpⱯ ɯ,I 'ɯɐpɐW
·ɯɐpⱯ ɯ,I 'ɯɐpɐW ǝpɔqɐ
____________________________
i'd like to see more strange, pretty chars like these:
꧁꧂ Wow! that's your name????
(inverted (upside-down) chars)
-- Can i enter them in Gmail without going to a Web site?
¿ǝʇᴉs qǝM ɐ oʇ ƃuᴉoƃ ʇnoɥʇᴉʍ lᴉɐɯꓨ uᴉ ɯǝɥʇ ɹǝʇuǝ ᴉ uɐƆ --
(sɹɐɥɔ (uʍop-ǝpᴉsdn) pǝʇɹǝʌuᴉ)
(up-dn)
__________________
Is there a nice Web page or a Youtube Clip that
explains these inverted (upside-down) characters?
(abcde, ǝpɔqɐ)
Madam, I'm Adam. ·ɯɐpⱯ ɯ,I 'ɯɐpɐW
·ɯɐpⱯ ɯ,I 'ɯɐpɐW ǝpɔqɐ
____________________________
i'd like to see more strange, pretty chars like these:
꧁꧂ Wow! that's your name????
There are a couple of ways to flip text without a website.
One could enter HTML code to create "upside down" text, but it is labor intensive. You need to look up the necessary Unicode character numbers.
For example the HTML for the inverted characters for "Hello World!" are:
¡plɹoM ollǝH
which results in:
¡plɹoM ollǝH
Note that the characters are a mix of regular characters ("H", "o", "M",
"l", "p") and special characters (ɹ = "ɹ").
Alternatively, you can create an HTML-compatible document file with a "flipped" character set. For example:
abcedfghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz
ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ
1234567890-=
!@#$%^&*() +
Becomes:
+ ()*⅋^%$#@¡
=-068ㄥ9ϛㄣƐᄅƖ
Z⅄XMΛ∩┴SɹQԀONW˥ʞſIHפℲƎpƆq∀ zʎxʍʌnʇsɹbdouɯlʞɾᴉɥƃɟpǝɔqɐ
There are a couple of ways to flip text without a website.
One could enter HTML code to create "upside down" text, but it is labor intensive. You need to look up the necessary Unicode character numbers.
For example the HTML for the inverted characters for "Hello World!" are:
¡plɹoM ollǝH
which results in:
¡plɹoM ollǝH
Note that the characters are a mix of regular characters ("H", "o", "M",
"l", "p") and special characters (ɹ = "ɹ").
(inverted (upside-down) chars)
-- Can i enter them in Gmail without going to a Web site?
The puzzle I posted in 2000 that was based on ASCII-only "flipped" text is below.
The Case of the Smart Leopard
After the death of Artie Barnes, detectives Ohms and Wattson were contacted by his daughter.
A Sure Rest
ase)J!e+say+dn'da+s
puo)asey+uo+adJe)
ay+Japunpa+e)o|s!
aJnseaJ++aJ)ashW
Carl G. wrote:
The puzzle I posted in 2000 that was based on ASCII-only "flipped"
text is below.
The Case of the Smart Leopard
After the death of Artie Barnes, detectives Ohms and Wattson were
contacted by his daughter.
maybe better as Homes and Wotsan, (?)
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