zoomer Posted September 6, 2017 Share Posted September 6, 2017 I think it will need a sorting by the intensity of emotion of Emojis .... Quote Link to comment
Taproot Posted September 6, 2017 Share Posted September 6, 2017 Will this feature allow the font list to finally display fonts in their own font style? Quote Link to comment
Vectorworks, Inc Employee PVA - Admin Posted September 6, 2017 Author Vectorworks, Inc Employee Share Posted September 6, 2017 2 minutes ago, Taproot said: Will this feature allow the font list to finally display fonts in their own font style? This feature does not affect that component of the UI. Quote Link to comment
JRA-Vectorworks-CAD Posted September 7, 2017 Share Posted September 7, 2017 Great new feature that will not only make structuring files more useful, but it will also add the chance for a bit more honour and fun which is just as important! Jonathan Reeves / Director / BA(Hons) M.Arch Dip.Arch RIBA / Jonathan Reeves Architecture Author of "Innovative Vectorworks BIM" www.jra-vectorworks-cad.co.uk Quote Link to comment
zoomer Posted September 7, 2017 Share Posted September 7, 2017 To get that right, UTF8 is a UTF16 without emojis ? I'am to old for that Emoji thing. I only use ASCII Smileys, especially those who don't smile Quote Link to comment
Vectorworks, Inc Employee Rick Berge Posted September 7, 2017 Vectorworks, Inc Employee Share Posted September 7, 2017 (edited) Unicode is the ability, UTF-* is the format of the bits and bytes to make it happen. No real difference in what they can hold, only in how it is represented internally. Edited September 7, 2017 by Rick Berge Quote Link to comment
zoomer Posted September 7, 2017 Share Posted September 7, 2017 Thanks Rick, So also UTF8 has enough space to handle Emojis ? I am thinking of other Apps to export to, which at one time became UTF8 support. Quote Link to comment
Vectorworks, Inc Employee Rick Berge Posted September 7, 2017 Vectorworks, Inc Employee Share Posted September 7, 2017 (edited) By analogy you can put text in a Word document, or text in a PDF; the person you hand it to needs to know what file type they're getting to know whether they can handle it. Essentially UTF8 starts with one byte for an ordinary character (so is somewhat compatible with ascii) and it grows to 2, 3, or 4 bytes as needed to fit a specific extended char. UTF16 starts with 2 bytes and doesn't ever pretend to be ascii. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unicode#UTF Edited September 7, 2017 by Rick Berge Quote Link to comment
zoomer Posted September 7, 2017 Share Posted September 7, 2017 Ooooh, that's hard to eat .... off my pay grade .... But interesting. Quote Link to comment
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