User talk:Pisceesumsprecan: Difference between revisions
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I don't know if this answers your request for information--the question is a bit vague. But feel free to ask again if not. —[[User:Muke|Muke Tever]] | [[User Talk:Muke|✎]] 12:08, 28 July 2007 (PDT) | I don't know if this answers your request for information--the question is a bit vague. But feel free to ask again if not. —[[User:Muke|Muke Tever]] | [[User Talk:Muke|✎]] 12:08, 28 July 2007 (PDT) | ||
::Have you been replacing the dotted circle with the letter the diacritic should go over? (i.e. click "æ" and the combination "◌̄" to get the three-character string "æ◌̄", then delete the dotted circle between the æ and the macron, after which you should have "ǣ"). If by 'does not combine' do you mean that it still stays separate, and you get something like æ¯ , then that's a font problem. If something else is happening, please describe your results... —[[User:Muke|Muke Tever]] | [[User Talk:Muke|✎]] 14:35, 29 July 2007 (PDT) |
Revision as of 13:35, 29 July 2007
I'm responding to your email here because it's easier to explain "live" like this.
The main page has Today is {{CURRENTDAYNAME}}, {{CURRENTDAY}} {{CURRENTMONTHNAME}} {{CURRENTYEAR}}.
To translate it for the Piscean front page you can use templates and magic words.
For example, a template like Template:PisceanMonth/07 (in which you would put the Piscean name for July) can be called by using {{PisceanMonth/{{CURRENTMONTH}}}}, which will automatically convert to calling Template:PisceanMonth/08 in August.
The magic word for the day of the week is {{CURRENTDOW}} (today being 5 — Sunday is 0 and it counts upwards), so you could have something like Template:PisceanDay/3 (in which you would put the Piscean name for Wednesday) which could be called by {{PisceanDay/{{CURRENTDOW}}}}.
So you could have put such templates in place and put a line—arranged however your grammar would have it—like [Today is] {{PisceanDay/{{CURRENTDOW}}}}, {{CURRENTDAY}} {{PisceanMonth/{{CURRENTMONTH}}}} {{CURRENTYEAR}}.
Hope this helps. —Muke Tever | ✎ 17:24, 25 July 2007 (PDT)
Thanks, Muke. —Anderson
Combining diacritics
Combining diacritics are placed after the letter they're supposed to appear on (the few double-wide combining diacritics go after between the two letters they cover). In the character selection box they're placed after a dotted circle (which is the usual convention in print to differentiate a combining diacritic from a spacing one) which you would replace with the letter you want to put it on.
If there's a "precombined" or single-character version of your character+diacritic combination, the Wiki software automatically converts it from the combination to the precombined character automatically when you submit it. This may prevent its displaying well if your font doesn't have glyphs for the precomposed character, even if it has the glyphs for the base and the diacritic.
If there is no precombined character, the wiki software will leave it as a sequence of character+diacritic, and it's up to the browser and your fonts to generate the correct appearance (some engines do better than others, and some fonts are better designed for this).
I don't know if this answers your request for information--the question is a bit vague. But feel free to ask again if not. —Muke Tever | ✎ 12:08, 28 July 2007 (PDT)
- Have you been replacing the dotted circle with the letter the diacritic should go over? (i.e. click "æ" and the combination "◌̄" to get the three-character string "æ◌̄", then delete the dotted circle between the æ and the macron, after which you should have "ǣ"). If by 'does not combine' do you mean that it still stays separate, and you get something like æ¯ , then that's a font problem. If something else is happening, please describe your results... —Muke Tever | ✎ 14:35, 29 July 2007 (PDT)