On 3/27/23 17:44, D.J.J. Ring, Jr. wrote:
Wouldn't it be wonderful to have a TEXT CONSOLE - no GUI running - so you could play cards.

Even better would be a networked card game. s for shuffle the cards, d for deal (with prompt for how many people), w for draw cards, I guess.

David

On Mon, Mar 27, 2023 at 2:13 PM Jude DaShiell <jdash...@panix.com> wrote:

    You know, if all of those symbols were in some font set and had text
    labels attached to them that could speak when a screen reader was
    used a
    whole bunch of playing card applications would suddenly become
    accessible
    for screen reader users.

-- Jude <jdashiel at panix dot com>
    "There are four boxes to be used in defense of liberty:
    soap, ballot, jury, and amo.
    Please use in that order."
    Ed Howdershelt 1940.

    On Mon, 27 Mar 2023, Charles Curley wrote:

    > On Mon, 27 Mar 2023 12:04:53 -0400
    > Thomas George <debianl...@mailfence.com> wrote:
    >
    > > I am amazed that the playing card symbols spade, heart,
    diamond and
    > > club don't appear any of the collections in my Debian Buster
    > > programs. I can insert them in the text I type by entering
    > > CTRL-SHIFT-Uunicode but if this text in a Thunderbird email to a
    > > friend he receives only the unicode.
    >
    > What do you mean by "CTRL-SHIFT-Uunicode"? What do you mean by "he
    > receives only the unicode"?
    >
    > Since you are on this list, I assume you are running a recent
    version
    > of Debian and Thunderbird. The playing card symbols are unicode
    > characters, the same as A, ;, or {. They just aren't on your
    > keyboard. You even have your choice of black ? or white ?. There are
    > also characters for individual playing cards: ?.
    >
    > There are a number of ways to get them. One way is to look
    > them up in another program, such as gucharmap (in the package of the
    > same name) and copy them to your email, which is what I just did.
    >
    > Once you send your email, displaying those characters is your
    > recipient's problem. If he doesn't have the characters to display,
    > chances are his display software will show some place-holder. I
    > conjecture that what you mean by "he receives only the unicode"
    is that
    > he sees a placeholder instead of the character.
    >
    >
    >

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