Created
August 23, 2017 13:23
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Minimalist example of how to transform a normal string into zalgo text using python
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import random | |
chars = [ | |
## super ## | |
"\u030d", "\u030e", "\u0304", "\u0305", "\u033f", | |
"\u0311", "\u0306", "\u0310", "\u0352", "\u0357", | |
"\u0351", "\u0307", "\u0308", "\u030a", "\u0342", | |
"\u0343", "\u0344", "\u034a", "\u034b", "\u034c", | |
"\u0303", "\u0302", "\u030c", "\u0350", "\u0300", | |
"\u030b", "\u030f", "\u0312", "\u0313", "\u0314", | |
"\u033d", "\u0309", "\u0363", "\u0364", "\u0365", | |
"\u0366", "\u0367", "\u0368", "\u0369", "\u036a", | |
"\u036b", "\u036c", "\u036d", "\u036e", "\u036f", | |
"\u033e", "\u035b", "\u0346", "\u031a" | |
## middle ## | |
"\u0315", "\u031b", "\u0340", "\u0341", "\u0358", | |
"\u0321", "\u0322", "\u0327", "\u0328", "\u0334", | |
"\u0335", "\u0336", "\u034f", "\u035c", "\u035d", | |
"\u035e", "\u035f", "\u0360", "\u0362", "\u0338", | |
"\u0337", "\u0361", "\u0489" | |
## sub ## | |
"\u0316", "\u0317", "\u0318", "\u0319", "\u031c", | |
"\u031d", "\u031e", "\u031f", "\u0320", "\u0324", | |
"\u0325", "\u0326", "\u0329", "\u032a", "\u032b", | |
"\u032c", "\u032d", "\u032e", "\u032f", "\u0330", | |
"\u0331", "\u0332", "\u0333", "\u0339", "\u033a", | |
"\u033b", "\u033c", "\u0345", "\u0347", "\u0348", | |
"\u0349", "\u034d", "\u034e", "\u0353", "\u0354", | |
"\u0355", "\u0356", "\u0359", "\u035a", "\u0323" | |
] | |
def zalgo(intensity,text): | |
new_text = '' | |
for c in text: | |
for i in range(intensity): | |
c = random.choice(chars) + c + random.choice(chars) | |
new_text += c | |
return new_text |
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