Facebook message text art3/17/2024 ![]() We have so much more to offer, because we just love everything that has to do with text! Would you like to add your own creations or can't find something? Flick us a message! Contact It's completely normal for some characters to appear as squares. When our generator has converted your text into a stylish fancy text you simply copy and paste it where you like! Like we said, you can use it anywhere! As your Twitter name, a Tweet, a Facebook post, in your bio, on Instagram, photo captions, signatures and so on! But, aye, who cares! Fancy fonts! And then what? □ The right name would probably be more like text styles or just fancy text. ![]() On Instagram, Facebook, Twitter, Whatsapp, WeChat, you name it. But, that is exactly why it works everywhere. Even though everyone always calls Messletters a font or typeface (even we do □), they're actually indeed not. Wait, fonts? I thought you said earlier Messletters weren't fonts? Fonts, hm, yeah, you're right. Like calligraphy fonts, cursive style, italic style, bold style, web script fonts, cursive fonts, handwriting fonts, old English fonts, word fonts, pretty fonts, etc. When you enter your text in our generator, it converts your normal text into these stylish fonts or fancy styles. Haha, well, Messletters are mostly just Unicode characters from foreign languages like Grεεκ ( Greek) or Гцѕѕідп (Russian - Cyrillic) or characters like the Phonetic Alphabet. Later on, as people started using multiple messengers, like Skype, Facebook and Twitter, we changed the name to Messletters, a combination from the words MESSenger and LETTERS. Pre-2008 Messletters was called MSN Letters, as people were using the fancy text generator mostly for their chat name in MSN Messenger, which was a very popular chat software back then. Posted on Monday, January 23rd, 2012 at 5:59 pm.First a bit of history behind the name Messletters. (Created the text at the the top of this page) » If you want to delve more, I’ve listed some resources below. Though I’ve a hankering to mix ASCII and imagery. My favorite ASCII art uses as few characters as possible, its minimal and lite. You may want to place some copy before the ASCII, otherwise it will show up in the snippet text. The resulting, “image” can looked warped in different clients. One problem with generating ASCII from a photo - besides being naff and your HTML possibly exceeding 100K - is you can’t control the output. Use a mono-spaced font like Courier New, which uses uniform spacing between each character. I’ve only seen two emails, using the marquee tag. I couldn’t resist…not only does it render with images off but the file size is only 1.3K. Once I narrowed the width, it rendered fine. Using the spacing character nbsp instead of the pre-tag, wide layouts wrap and become jumbled on the iPhone (below left). Eventually I copied from Notepad into HTML, but wrapped the ASCII in a tag, which maintains preformatted text. ![]() If you save HTML from Word, it retains the spacing but adds excess code and styling in the header. If you copy from Notepad into HTML, it collapses, as it doesn’t retain the spacing. The only clients it looked skewed in, were MobileMe and Symbian S60. It looked fine almost everywhere I tested, under a range of browsers. While I’m guilty of using this cow with horns reindeer in my sig occasionally. I’d never looked at how it renders beyond a few clients. Jim Ducharme contacted me over Xmas, asking about ASCII art support.
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