Vowels
Front | Near-front | Central | Near-back | Back | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Close | i y | ɨ ʉ | ɯ u | ||
Near-close | ɪ ʏ | ɪ̈ ʊ̈ | ʊ | ||
Close-mid | e ø | ɘ ɵ | ɤ o | ||
Mid | e̞ ø̞ | ə ɵ̞ | ɤ̞ o̞ | ||
Open-mid | ɛ œ | ɜ ɞ | ʌ ɔ | ||
Near-open | æ | ɐ |
Vowels
Front | Near-front | Central | Near-back | Back | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Close | i y | ɨ ʉ | ɯ u | ||
Near-close | ɪ ʏ | ɪ̈ ʊ̈ | ʊ | ||
Close-mid | e ø | ɘ ɵ | ɤ o | ||
Mid | e̞ ø̞ | ə ɵ̞ | ɤ̞ o̞ | ||
Open-mid | ɛ œ | ɜ ɞ | ʌ ɔ | ||
Near-open | æ | ɐ |
Unicode table - List of most common Unicode characters * | |
* This summary list contains about 2000 characters for most common ocidental/latin languages and most printable symbols but not chinese, japanese, arab, archaic and some unprintable. | |
Contains character codes in HEX (hexadecimal), decimal number, name/description and corresponding printable symbol. | |
What is Unicode? | |
Unicode is a standard created to define letters of all languages and characters such as punctuation and technical symbols. Today, UNICODE (UTF-8) is the most used character set encoding (used by almost 70% of websites, in 2013). The second most used character set is ISO-8859-1 (about 20% of websites), but this old encoding format is being replaced by Unicode. | |
How to identify the Unicode number for a character? | |
Type or paste a character: |
{ | |
"@id": "http://example.com/app-profile.json", | |
"@context": { | |
"title": "http://purl.org/dc/terms/title", | |
"description": "http://purl.org/dc/terms/description", | |
"creator": "http://purl.org/dc/terms/creator" | |
}, | |
"title": "JSON-LD Dublin Core Application Profile", | |
"description": "This is an example of a Dublin Core Application Profile as a JSON-LD. The point is to demonstrate that a JSON-LD context document could contain metadata. If it is desirable to annotate the use of particular properties they could theoretically fit into @graph using existing or a new DCAP vocabulary, etc.", | |
"creator": "http://twitter.com/edsu", |
#!/bin/sh | |
# | |
# Instant Wordpress! | |
# ------------------ | |
# Script for installing the latest version of WordPress plus a number of useful plugins. | |
# Source : https://github.com/snaptortoise/wordpress-quick-install | |
# | |
# | |
# Latest version of WP |
#!/bin/sh | |
# | |
# Instant Wordpress! | |
# ------------------ | |
# Script for installing the latest version of WordPress plus a number of useful plugins. | |
# Source : https://github.com/snaptortoise/wordpress-quick-install | |
# | |
# | |
# Latest version of WP |
##Add shebang | |
# Validate syntax | |
#Make version numbers skipped so that updates don't kill the script. | |
##Wordpress | |
wget https://wordpress.org/latest.zip | |
##Wordpress Tools | |
#WP-CLI | |
curl -O https://raw.githubusercontent.com/wp-cli/builds/gh-pages/phar/wp-cli.phar |
<!DOCTYPE html> | |
<html lang="en"> | |
<head> | |
<meta charset="utf-8"> | |
<title>Bash Command Visualization</title> | |
<style type="text/css"> | |
* { margin: 0; padding: 0; } | |
#chart { |
<!DOCTYPE html> | |
<html lang="en"> | |
<head> | |
<title>The Word Stone</title> | |
<link rel="stylesheet" href="styles.css"> | |
</head> | |
<body> | |
<div class="container"> | |
<div class="canvas" id="canvas"></div> | |
<div id="wordlist" class="wordlist"></div> |
# We start by loading up PyICU. | |
import PyICU as icu | |
# Let's create a test text. Notice it contains some punctuation. | |
test = u"This is (\"a\") test!" | |
# We create a wordbreak iterator. All break iterators in ICU are really RuleBasedBreakIterators, and we need to tell it which locale to take the word break rules from. Most locales have the same rules for UAX#29 so we will use English. | |
wb = icu.BreakIterator.createWordInstance(icu.Locale.getEnglish()) | |
# An iterator is just that. It contains state and then we iterate over it. The state in this case is the text we want to break. So we set that. |
$ pip list | |
basemap (1.0.7) | |
cairocffi (0.6) | |
CairoSVG (1.0.11) | |
cffi (0.8.6) | |
colour (0.0.6) | |
cssselect (0.9.1) | |
Cython (0.22) | |
GDAL (1.11.1) | |
lxml (3.4.2) |