简体版 繁體版 English 한국어
登録 ログイン

ascii letterの例文

例文モバイル版携帯版

  • Only the brand names themselves use ASCII letters; all other words use the Japanese alphabet.
  • The game is mostly in Japanese, although ASCII letters can be used when typing in names.
  • Some vandalism of this type is quite subtle, such as replacing ASCII letters in the URL with identical-looking Cyrillic letters.
  • But we may as well go with HTML 5 instead, since that allows punctuation and such as well as non-ASCII letters.
  • Some instances of this type of vandalism are quite subtle, such as replacing ASCII letters in the URL with identical-looking Cyrillic letters.
  • In IPA contexts, its use is normally preferred to that of the Ascii letter g, which is displayed with a curly closed tail in Roman fonts.
  • Names be inserted using either hiragana, katakana or using the ASCII letters traditionally given to most European languages; this applies to both naming the dog and the owner.
  • :The only real problem I've seen is that users can pretend to be someone else by using unicode for letters that look practically identical to standard ascii letters.
  • While the story itself is in Japanese, most of the information that is important to the game uses ASCII letters that are familiar to people who are fluent in the English language.
  • It is hard enough as it is to keep having to check preview what & # 658; is, if also all ASCII letters would be thus encoded editing would be made almost impossible.
  • For example, the stock \ hyphenation command only accepts ASCII letters ( by default ), so it cannot be used to correct hyphenation for words with non-ASCII characters ( e . g . ? ? ?) which are very common in almost all languages except English.
  • They're definitely not the ASCII letters DVD, because ( a ) in some fonts, they're shorter and / or wider-spaced, and ( b ) unlike DVD, they return no results in a search of Wikipedia ( although both get the same Google results ).
  • The Internet standards ( Requests for Comments ) for protocols mandate that component hostname labels may contain only the ASCII letters'a'through'z'( in a case-insensitive manner ), the digits'0'through'9', and the hyphen ('-').
  • It never worked for namespace with non-ASCII letters in them, since URL-encodes those, but we don't have any here so there was no problem as long as nobody copied the code to non-English projects . ( For an example of what happens on non-English wikis, see e . g . : fi : Keskustelu k鋣tt鋔鋝t?: Ilmari Karonen / nstest .)