I believe I saw the “(_/” in one of your posts and did indeed recognize it as an unbent paperclip, so it’s a good emoticon. Thank you for providing these! c=@
Thanks! (Keep in mind, though, “clippy” should not be capitalized when referring to paperclip-maximizers in general. As written, your statement means I’m good relative to a set that includes only myself.)
What does this emoticon depict? If “@” is a paperclip then what is “c=” intended to represent?
The emoticon as a whole is a paperclip. The @ represents the part of it where the inner loop terminates to make the wire-tab that clips from the front of the paper (along with the outer coil that is near this). The c= represents the other end of the paperclip, in the part where the wire is still looping around.
Could you post an image or a string of these characters forming a paperclip?
I didn’t record the unicode characters or their appearance, so I can’t. However, if you imagine a paperclip lying horizontally and cutting it into three character-sized pieces, that is what those symbols look like.
I typically use c=@ as the “happy” emoticon, and (_/ as the “sad” emoticon (because it’s unbent).
No preference about what others do for emoticons.
Edit: Someone also found some Unicode symbols which, together, make a better paperclip figure, but I can’t get that to work.
I believe I saw the “(_/” in one of your posts and did indeed recognize it as an unbent paperclip, so it’s a good emoticon. Thank you for providing these! c=@
Thanks! You’re a good human! c=@
That’s sweet of you, Clippy! Thanks! Admittedly I’ve got a fairly small sample size, but I think you’re a good clippy too.
(edited for capitalization)
Thanks! (Keep in mind, though, “clippy” should not be capitalized when referring to paperclip-maximizers in general. As written, your statement means I’m good relative to a set that includes only myself.)
What does this emoticon depict? If “@” is a paperclip then what is “c=” intended to represent?
Could you post an image or a string (ETA: or a TeX object) of these characters forming a paperclip?
The emoticon as a whole is a paperclip. The @ represents the part of it where the inner loop terminates to make the wire-tab that clips from the front of the paper (along with the outer coil that is near this). The c= represents the other end of the paperclip, in the part where the wire is still looping around.
I didn’t record the unicode characters or their appearance, so I can’t. However, if you imagine a paperclip lying horizontally and cutting it into three character-sized pieces, that is what those symbols look like.
Thanks for your explanation! ⊂⊆⊃
Thanks! ⊂⊇⊃