Q/C: Your font has not included the cherished type characters of my country/principality/province/state/city/streetgang. Thís could mean wär. Ó
A: No, this means that you’re using the wrong tool in the kit. Not that Jittlov ScreenFont is inadequate for multilingual communication. Look closely, and you’ºll
and even American Sign Language ( · )! …Okay, alright, those are made from standard letters and special elementals in my ScreenFont. However, they
DO appear in your filenames — which currently can really startle most Mac-users, not to mention PCers and Amigans.
Again, Jittlov ScreenFont is a SCREEN-font. For your eyes only. International communicators should only use the font labled Jittlovº, which has a full set of the
ASCll favorites — ÀÄÅÃÆÇÉÑÖÕØŒÜáàâäãåæçéèêëíìîïñóòôöõøœúùûü¨ — as well as their italicized versions, ÀÄÅÃÆÇÉÑÖÕØŒÜáàâäãåæçéèêëíìîïñóòôöõøœúùûü¨.
Every typo that you can make in Apple’s prime fonts (Chicago, Courier, Geneva, Helvetica, Times) will rëad the sæme in the Jittlov font.
That line of accented ASCll looks ºimpressive — but it’s actually an extremely limited set, for a font-keyboard system that is a twisted morass of compromises
(in my humble opinion). Your Mac’s ASCll template has 257 character positions. Of these, 36 are key-functions (space, tab, return, erase, etc.) and shouldn’ºt
contain important image-characters since typing them can do odd things (except in this SimpleText document). That leaves 221 safe character positions.
Sounds great. …For the world’s 2,800+ written languages, and their regional accents? Sounds like kind of a tight fit.
I had a choice: undertake the nobly insane task of pleasing everyone on Earth to possibly begin a New Age of Peace & Prosperity — or put in a bunch of little
pictures that would make me laugh. I’m an Amerrykin. Mindless Entertainment comes first. And during that playtime, while making every possible ResEdit
mistake and more, I stumbled across something soºwonderful — an earthshaking discovery that could open up amazing new ‘fontiers’ in communications!!
† …Did I hear a chortle of skepticism? Then just try the following with any other font!
While in the all-purpose Jittlov ScreenFont, type a lowercase letter, then Ctrl O — and you’ºll get a caron/hacheck ( ºº) on top. Not alongside. It’s right on top,
and centered. You can make a perfect c, e, r, s, iººand z. Or type any capital letter, then Ctrl N, and you can make a perfect C, E, R, S, I and Z. Now you can
spell the tongue-twister that only Czechs can easily speak, «Strc prst skrze krk!» (“Stick your finger through your throat”º).
“So what,” you may srug, “I’ve made accented letters before, tapped Option U to make two dots over them.” ¡Nå-nå, Señor! You may not realize it, but your
computer doesn’ºt make ümläuttëd letters. It does not add a dieresis ( ºÛº) over an e. The key-code only summons the already-existing ë in the font. IF it even
exists in the font! Type a Welsh hatted-Y, and the best you’ºll get is y^— whi^ch is pre`tty^ awfu°l in a se`nte`nce full of these offset accents. Forget about
typing Vietnamese, with its 36 accents above and below letters.
Matter of fact, many commercial (ie, not º*free*) fonts contain only the 26 Latin-English capital letters and just a few ºpunctuation marks! Now, that may be
good enough for Shareware, but it’s not good enough for me. Or for you. We have powerful Computers, we should have nothing less than global communication
capability! Maximum Babylon, but minimal babel. Instead of having a font-box clogged with thousands of combinations of every accent with every letter —
wouldn’ºt it be much more efficient to back-insert any ºmark onto any ºexisting letter? Well, nowº you can!!
A A AÊ AÁ AË AÈ AÏ AÌ AÓ AÍ AÔ AÎ AÙ A¸ A˛ a aÒ aÚ aÛ aˆ a˜ a˚ a˝ aˇ aı a¯ a˙ aÙ a¸ a˛ a˘ a¯ÎÙ˘ W W WÊ WÁ WË WÈ WÏ WÌ WÓ WÍ WÔ WÎ WÙ W¸ W˛ w wÒ wÚ wÛ wˆ w˜ w˚ w˝ wˇ wı w¯ w˙ wÙ w¸ w˛ w˘ w¯ÎÙ˘
O O OÊ OÁ OË OÈ OÏ OÌ OÓ OÍ OÔ OÎ OÙ O¸ O˛ o oÒ oÚ oÛ oˆ o˜ o˚ o˝ oˇ oı o¯ o˙ oÙ o¸ o˛ o˘ o¯ÎÙ˘ N N NÊ NÁ NË NÈ NÏ NÌ NÓ NÍ NÔ NÎ NÙ N◊ N˛ n nÒ nÚ nÛ nˆ n˜ n˚ n˝ nˇ nı n¯ n˙ nÙ n◊ n˛ n˘ n¯ÎÙ˘
U U UÊ UÁ UË UÈ UÏ UÌ UÓ UÍ UÔ UÎ UÙ U◊ U˛ u uÒ uÚ uÛ uˆ u˜ u˚ u˝ uˇ uı u¯ u˙ uÙ u¸ u˛ u˘ u¯ÎÙ˘ J J JÊ JÁ JË JÈ JÏ JÌ JÓ JÍ JÔ JÎ JÙ J◊ J˛ j jÒ jÚ jÛ jˆ j˜ j˚ j˝ jˇ jı j¯ j˙ jÙ j◊ j˛ j˘ j¯ÎÙ˘
And so on… You’ve got a full set of super-diacriticals in both uppercase and lowercase positions! More amazingly, these are all zero-width characters, so
they won’ºt add any spacing between letters! That special power sadly makes them invisible to PopChar selection — yet accessible in Mac Key Caps. Or give in
and learn their simple key-codes, as detailed in the Jittlov ScreenFont and Jittlov-Slavic Legends. You can even make letters that never before existed. For
when you start your own country. (I’m available for Minister of Vidw¯o˚ Producin.)
Like their creator, Jittlov accents are independent, faithful, fully-functional, and don’ºt require any more room. Add them over and under letters, ºjust as you
would in handwriting. Experiment, and you can even make something like… sss — hey, that’s a double hacek…in different colors! These accents will even
screen-wrap with their assigned letters! My zero-width marks are zero-mass and cumulative!! I can write real Hebrew and all the Arabic languages and
even Tolkien Feanorian with little vowel dots and dashes év˛ˆwÎÛr˚y¯Ówıh◊w˜rÔ˙w¯ÎÙ˘!!!ºÎÙ Å
Take it a step further. Zero-width characters don’ºt have to be accent marks. They can also be picture elements — each one adding, overlapping, accepting
individual style and color changes. The possibilities are quite marvelous. (And examples are scattered throughout these fonts… Á ºÁ ºÁ ºÁ ºÁ ºÁº = !"#$%& )
[Important: if you tinker with Jittlov zero-width images in ResEdit, whatever’s holding them in position can easily collapse. Always experiment on a copy.]
Q/C: Do you think including Braille is some kind of clever joke?
A: No, I think it’s educational and informative for sighted people, and it’s also used by sighted Braille transcribers. I wanted to include more than just the
alphabet and numbers, but was told quite strongly by the L.A. Braille Institute’s representative that the code was far more complex than it looked, that I’d need
to take their complete course in transcription, and that placing characters in standard type-key positions “would cause more harm than good”. Which makes
no sense, because there already is a Macintosh Braille font, and a ResEdit template. So that American system has been fully and exactly reproduced here —
along with a complete Jittlov-Code Legend for your edification. Read and learn.
Q/C: You say that you have the complete Cyrillic alphabet, but why does it not coördinate with my keyboard here in Novosibirsk?
A: Of the available Russian fonts I studied, very few letters (or numbers)º jibed with this American keyboard. Or with each other. There seem to be several
different typewriter layouts in the ex-CCCP. And there are 33 Cyrillic letter-pairs — mercifully less than the 45+ letter-pairs created by St. Cyril, yet still
beyond this US keyboard. So the computer needs to be set for Cyrillic Key-Mapping. And the font has to be Res-encoded for a Russian character set.
Too many rules. Until somebody clearly explains them and why I need to obey them, I’m formatting the Jittlov Slavic ºfont according to where it’s being used
— Los Angeles, “the Illitera-City.” Through a process of foreign correspondence, exhaustive deliberation and a series of coin-flips, I have matched 26 pairs
of Cyrillic characters as closely as possible with their English phonetic values, then assigned the remaining letters to non-volatile keys and combinations:
Again — 26 letter-pairs correspond to the US keyboard. To see all of the rest, use PopChar or KeyCaps. But only the Jittlov-Slavic Legend will show you my
Secret Third Font, with Cyrillic phonetic equivalents in Latin letters. To see that hybrid,º just highlight the Cyrillic, select Italic (Ô I) [later, BOLD], and you get
an Instant PseudoPhonetic Translation! (Sure to make you a hit in diplomatic circles. So to speak.)
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z Ä Ç Ñ Ü å ä à
A B C D E ºF ºG ºH I J ºK ºL M N ºO P Q R S T U V W ºX ºY Z Ä Ç Ñ Ü å {more soon}ä à
I didn’ºt say this font was useable. But it is ºcomplete. It contains not only the Russian Cyrillic, but also the Cyrillic letters used by Byelorussian, Bulgarian,
Kazakh, Kirghiz, Moldavian, Outer Mongolian, Slovenian, Tajik, Turkmen, Ukrainian, Uzbek, Azerbaijani and 60 other languages in the Altaic, Uralic, Caucasian and
Paleo-Asiatic families. Uppercase and lowercase. Along with my zero-width accents. If your target party also has Jittlov-Slavic, then everything should
transmit quite sobwrÅwÒnno (hunky-dory). If not, I plan to be out of the blast-range by then.
[No Cyrillic italics yet — and still working on a better set, with better letter and accent positioning… I’d rather have them on the simplest
key-combinations, since the zero-widths are completely invisible in PopChar.)
Q/C: Why did you make a font for Latins and Russians, but nothing for the 25,000,000 people who read Urdu/Tamil/Telugo/Etcetera?
A: For this premier version of the Jittlov Font, Latin letters were given priority, because Latin letters are the most widely-used type characters on Earth.
Thanks to Roman Catholicism, Latin letters are used by most of Europe and Africa, some of Asia, and by all of the Americas and Oceania. Latin letters are also
the only ones on my keyboard.
Cyrillic came next, because it’s the next most-used in the world’s newspapers, and it’s part of my heritage. My father could read, write and speak Russian,
and over 80 other languages and dialects. There’s still no computer on Earth that can do what he could do at the drop of a thought. Also known as “The Human
Encyclopedia”, Dad was developing an interlingual translation program at Rand Corp, when a business partner (ºJoseph Krueger) stole his work, which the CIA
wouldn’ºt allow used as court evidence because it was all Classified. That greed and idiocy killed Dad’s spirit, and every new wonder that he could have
personally inspired died in the summer of ‘68. This font isn’t even a
I’d like to hope I’m helping to convey some of his fascination with translation, communication and understanding.
Love to make this font more complete, with Amharic, Arabic, Armenian, Bengali, Burmese, Cherokee, Chinese (Chianthitsi & Chu Yin), Coptic, Devanagari, Egyptian
(Demotic & Heiroglyphic), Enochian, Ethiopic, Gaelic, Georgic (Chuzuri & Mchedruli), German Gothic, Glagolitsa (Croatian, Old Slavic & Cyrillic), Greek, Gurmukhi,
If you can’ºt find your country’s language in the suitcase, it’s because I couldn’ºt do another 4 months of work on zero income. The usual Destitute Developer’s
Dilemma…no funding, no fonting. I mean, all ºof my problems could be quickly and easily resolved, by a simple Act of Ghod. Perhaps I shall win a MacArthur
Grant, or the Reader’s Digest $10 Million Sweepstakes, orºa generous donation fºrom Your Capitalº’s University. And then — it’s the Jittlov WorldFontº —
with the main benefactor’s country centered in the new fonts’ ºWizBat globes!
Q/C: Yo! Wiz! What gifs?!? Like your runes, but they don’ºt like all match my ancient divining stones!
A: That’s because the shrink-wrapped set you bought at the Magick & Fetish Shoppe is less than historically accurate. Which is excuseable. I thought this
little twig-letter font would be a snap. But there’ve been over a dozen rune alphabets since the Unknown Magus notched the first log in southeastern Europe.
Which version to use? The prettiest? Most commercial? Or most faithful? Some people invest a lot of power in rune marks. How many know their origin?
Some characters appear to be imported from Etruscan, Iberian, Roman and Greek. Other runes might have been inspired by the look of their speaker’s lips
and tongue… v £ Vºá all have a ‘TH’ sound. That second £ is the Icelandic Thorn — but it existed long before the Norse Vikings. Runic recorded early writings
of the Germanic tribes, the Goths, Vandals, Lombards, Franks, Frisians (3rd century), Teutons, Angles, Saxons, Jutes, then the Scandinavians (6th century), Turks
and Hungarians. Runic probably inspired some Cyrillic. It was a simpler time. Writers plagiarized letters instead of source codes.
I wonder how many people actually wrote. Consider, that if only 10 rune-masters existed at any one time, from 100-1400 A.D., from Vinland to Istanbul, and
each carved only one message per month…there should be a lot more out there than 5000 inscriptions. Maybe the populaton valued firewood and fencing more
than records and accounting.
To make it more complicated, Runic alphabets oscillated between 24, then 16, 33, and 18 characters, and some runes changed sounds. Swedo-Norwegian and
Danish Runic had two A’s, but no E, O, D, G or P — so you had to depend on the rune-master for interpretation (and what a priestly way to maintain employment
and power). Runes could be inverted or reversed, especially for spells. Some characters were ligatured into bind-runes and monograms. And some of these
research books (NB, The Magician’s Companionº) weren’ºt completely proofread, so their symbols may be incorrect.
Translators have even more fun, as some rune messages were written boustrophedon (successive lines in alternate directions). And others were apparently
written by the ancient ancestors of all the misspellers on the Internet. Like Hebrew, some sounds have different letters at the end of a word. And some
letters were ºwords, shorthand symbols for gods/emotions and objects.
And that’s one way you can spot original Runic — it’s usually cross-cut, since horizontal marks could be confused with the woodgrain. Later records were
laboriously chiseled or pick-axed in stone, allowing for those artsy curves. Then painted dark red, brown, blue or black.
Runic was usually not too complex, since small details would chip out (KISS — Keep It Simple Sven).
Original Futharkabet: FUVARCGWHNIJYPZSTBEMLQOD . Original Danish Runic alphabet:
Jittlov-Runic is based upon the Elder Futhark — so-called because the first 6 symbols in the original rune-alphabet FUVARCGWHNIJYPZSTBEMLQOD
spell “FºUThARK.” Or ‘FºUThARC” if you want to get technical. Or “FUThORK” if you’re reading the Maes Howe tomb graffiti in the Orkney Islands. It doesn’ºt
matter — I’ve reassigned everything to match the Latin “Abcdef”, so Runesters can spell more easily (if you know what I mean) (and I think you do).
Not only doth thou geth a full Futharkabet, in both uppercase (full-span) and lowercase (Jittlovian Compressed), but ye shall also fynd:
È All of the questionable Runes from later Fuvarkabets — áàâäãå≠çéè— so you can get really messed up.
È A full set of Runesque punctuation and other font symbols, including Runic Applesº
È Plus, for the first time, Runic-style numerals 1234567890 in a useable decimal system (as channeled through me by the Font-Muses)! Like Futhark, some
symbols look familiar and some don’ºt — but note the symmetry, the runic logic…48º=48 , 369º=369.
Copy and Paste a few lines of full-span runes — and you have designer-barbarian barbed wire:
A BºC D E F G H I J K L M N O P R S T U V W X Y Z Ä Ç Ñ ë ( ) & @ # $ ¢º£ ¥ % ¶ §ºß ƒ∫Δ1234567890
A BºC D E F G H I J K L M N O P R S T U V W X Y Z Ä Ç Ñ ë ( ) & @ # $ ¢º£ ¥ % ¶ §ºß ƒ∫Δ1234567890
A BºC D E F G H I J K L M N O P R S T U V W X Y Z Ä Ç Ñ ë ( ) & @ # $ ¢º£ ¥ % ¶ §ºß ƒ∫Δ1234567890
A BºC D E F G H I J K L M N O P R S T U V W X Y Z Ä Ç Ñ ë ( ) & @ # $ ¢º£ ¥ % ¶ §ºß ƒ∫Δ1234567890
A BºC D E F G H I J K L M N O P R S T U V W X Y Z Ä Ç Ñ ë ( ) & @ # $ ¢º£ ¥ % ¶ §ºß ƒ∫Δ1234567890
A BºC D E F G H I J K L M N O P R S T U V W X Y Z Ä Ç Ñ ë ( ) & @ # $ ¢º£ ¥ % ¶ §ºß ƒ∫Δ1234567890
These marks are true to form (within the bounds of 9-point bitmap), and should be every bit as magickal as those symbols in your Diviner’s Instruction Manual.
Specifically excluded is the swastika, despite its being a common and positive symbol in ancient Greece, India, China, Scandinavia, and pre-Columbian America.
Desperate purists can kludge a backwards one from the ASCll-maker. But why not use my all-in-one ˘ instead? Direct, effective, and unsullied by infamy.
One more little trick — highlight the Runic, tap Ô I to italicize it…and you have a reasonable English transliteration:
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
A B C D E F ºG H I ºJ ºK L M N O ºP ºQ R ºS ºT ºU V W ºX Y ºZ
Before you ask — there is no Runic Italic. IMHO, that’s like Military Intelligence, Congressional Ethics, Reagan Memoirs, Decaffeinated Coffee, Down Elevator,
Tight Slacks, Tame Cat, and IBM Compatible. Good intention, unnatural combination.
disco music, government organization, journalistic integrity , religious science, sensitive male, working vacation, jumbo shrimp
Q/C: Your WizBats don’ºt have the cherished flag/banner/bird/beast of my nation/principality/province/state/school/company/barrio. This could mean wãr Ó
A: (sigh) You must take a number and get in line. There are over 10,000 flags, banners, shields and logos, many of them too complex and colorful for a tiny
9x13-pixel black & white character. More importantly, I have other things I want and need to do with my life. Like, get ºa life. And an income big enough to
get a credit card. Then, some day, there will be a Jittlov-FlagFont (…no, that doesn’ºt sound right…) Jittlov-Banners (…uh-uh…) Jittlov-LogoFont (okay) But
right now, all I’ve got in this first, premier, Collector’s Edition of the Jittlov Font Suitcase is the Ol’º Stars & Stripes Ï …Wait, let me try something…
# º• º = ºº⁄ ⁄ Á > ;: ⁄ÈÈÈÈ
[NOTE: all of this changes when I finish and include the Fºlag font/position — with makings for a full international flag set, including the United Nations.]
Q/C: Your WizBats have not included the Sacred God/Goddess/Icon of my religion/philosophy/tax-writeoff! This could mean a Holy Wår! Ó
A: (Now there’s ºan oxymoron.) If your Deity of Choice has the power (and the ∞ time) to ResEdit the world's religions (8000 in Africa alone) into 88 available
font character positions, you have my blessing and my awe. Until then, the devout may find that many of the Jittlov ScreenFont symbols are appropriate to
one’s personal worship: † † º(Catholicism), (Protestantism), Á (ºJudaism), (Buddhism), ‡ (Hinduism), (Islam), Áº (Wicca), › (Paganism), (Taoism),
(Mormonism), † (Norwegian Seamen’s Church), ª (Feminism), ª (Chauvinism), ∞ (Atheism), Ê (Illuminati), $ (Scientology), (my neighborhood). In this
premiere edition of JittlovJam, the Church of the SubGenius gets the ornate micro-Bob κ because I’m a card-carrying SubGenius Reverend (the best $1.00 I
ever spent), even though creator-channeler Douglass St. Clair Smith claims I’m actually a genius and therefore disqualified. Personally, I prefer the little ÿ
NOTE: using one's ghod-given imagination, religious fervor and the Size option, a humble † can become ––– and rise†to a greater†Glory † !!! Hallelujah! {\A/}
If I have missed offending anyone, I shall endeavor to be more thorough in my future freeware — Jittlov-IkonMania. Have your Deity call me.
[NOTE: all of the above changes when I finish the Religious Symbol font/position — which will include these:]
º ï ñ †ó ò ô fl ö õ ú¶ ùù † î ì í ë ºê û ü Ø ü µ Æ ∂ ∑ Ó ∏ fl ‡ · π Ω æ ø ¿ ¡ À Õ Ã Õ Î Ï
Ideology, Dermatology, Arachnology, Anthropology, Methodology — and Kibology? Kibo, what’s your Sign??
Q/C: Vikings did not have horned helmets, you are perpetuating a myth. ›
A: Which is so unlike every other human endeavor, every religion, corporation and movie studio… Anyway, that’s not just a myth — it is Bjørn Niklås, the hero
of my next movie, “Bjørn to be Wild” — wherein you shall learn the surprising Origin of the Viking Horned Helmet, and of Odin, Loki, the New World, Time Travel,
Hollywood, Santa Claus, and Mass Merchandise Placement. That’s assuming I find a financier for a movie as entertaining, compelling, curious, multi-leveled and
creatively dense as this font & everything else I do. Otherwise, it’ºll be a paperback. Profusely illustrated. With subtitles. In very small type. Watch for it.
(And if you’re seriously upset, here’s a de-horned Bjørn: ¸ )
Q/C: You have not included every Greek letter & maths notation + ≈ symbols change when I alias a file. This could mean ∑å®!!
A: Holy-Gee-Zeus§ Jittlov ScreenFont has all the Greek that Geneva can speak! And as an ex-UCLA Math Major, I beg to differential — it also has all of the
Alright, okay…so my ScreenFont’s º°∞ ¬ ºitalicize into ° ∞ ¬ …but your Top Security computations shouldn’ºt be visible in your filenames anyway. Consider
using the Jittlov WizBats as a Secret Kode, and add some whimsical fun into your paranoid workaholic existence. The little Ì ºand Ì will work here. Just
be sure to keep an exact duplicate of ºJittlov safely vaulted, in case the Ï makes this valuable tool illegal too.
When you want all of the Greek, in both upper and lowercase lettering, then use Jittlov Greekº. To maximize translation, it’s phonetically aligned to the Latin
alphabet — matching the Greek template already specified in ResEdit. A plethora of mathematic notation fills the rest of the font positions, along with essential
scientific, astronomical and astrological symbols, and most of the alchemical ones! Record your mum’s favorite recipes in their original language.
[Jittlov Greek lineup]
[Jittlov MathSci lineup]
Â Ê Á Ë È Í Î Ï Ì Ó Ô À à Œ œ – — “ ” ‘ ’ ÷ ◊ ÿ Ÿ ⁄ € ‹ › fi fl ‡ · ‚ „ ‰: ; < s t u
Ò Ú Û Ù ı ˆ ˜ ¯ ˘ ˙ ˚ ¸ ˝ ˛ ˇ op q r= > v w ≈
And check out Jittlov-BuildIt — which has all the arrows, molecules, bars and connectors — even TinkerToy, Lincoln Logs, Erector/Mechano and Lego Blocks!
Now nothing but impatience can stop you from creating your own silicon-based toyform!
[Jittlov BuildIt lineup]
On that note… As a special bonus, the Jittlov Suitcase even has a small platoon of Font Nanotechs (enlarged viewΩ Á ° ° ° ° ° ¢ )¶ That’s right! Every
pixel on your screen will be brand-new and shiny! For free!!ü
Don’ºt believe me? Well,º just open the little green suitcase with ResEdit, and voilà! º Jittlov Fonts are now at your mercy! Of course, so is your entire operating
system. The wise thing is to do all of your probing and experimentation on somebody else’s computer — perhaps the computers at your office. If you work at
the IR$, then by all means feel free to ResEdit-open all ºof the system fonts (and be sure to push Ô Del on closing).
Coming Soon: Jittlov WizBats — no letters or accents, just wall-to-wall WizBats, with special characters to kluge your own pictures! Stay tooned!
[NOTE: all of this changes when I finish and include the Greek & Math/Science Symbol font/position.]
Q/C: Your'e k00l ºduzent allow Me ot maek a desent SMiley :-( or my bAt-sig.^"^ !! This kud mean anNet Flame~WAr!!!!!1 >8-E
A: I read you, CyberDude, and I’m now working on the answer to that urgent, earthshaking problem. Coming Soon: Jittlov AsciiMaster — a font specially
designed to beautifully display and print those wonderful ASCII pictures now littering netspace! Soon, you’ºll be able to type all 479 of your fave type-smilies!
(NOTE: in this Jittlov edition, ASCII characters 17-27 only appear easily in SimpleText & BBEdit. Until you’ve tried each one in Claris, WordPerfect (etc), don’ºt
dive into serious asciification without backing up your document. Good Luck. Your smileage may vary. ; º
[NOTE: all of this gets removed from those positions, and a better/accessible tools when I finish and include the ASCII & Symbol font/position.]
ASCII-basic elements in prep: Q R
«~~~~~~~~ [º PROCEED to ReadMe 4…if you dare.º º]~~~~~~~~Δ