![]() This function print ASCII text in normal mode (return None) and raise artError in exception. > Art = text2art ( "art" ) # Return ASCII text (default font) and default chr_ignore=True > print ( Art ) _ _ _ _ _ | |_ / _` || '_|| _| | (_| || | | |_ \_,_||_| \_| > Art = text2art ( "art", font = 'block', chr_ignore = True ) # Return ASCII text with block font > print ( Art ). This function return ASCII text as str in normal mode and raise artError in exception. ⚠️ From Version 5.3 \n is used as the default line separator instead of \r\n (Use sep parameter if needed) 1. ⚠️ From Version 3.3 Non-ASCII fonts added (These fonts are not compatible with some environments) ⚠️ Some fonts don't support all characters Note3 : Use ASCII_ARTS to access all ASCII arts name list (new in Version 5.7).Note2 : Use NON_ASCII_ARTS to access all Non-ASCII arts name list (new in Version 4.6).Note1 : Use ART_NAMES to access all arts name list (new in Version 4.2).Randart function is added in Version 2.2 as art("random") shortcut. ![]() ![]() > aprint ( "butterfly" ) # print art Ƹ̵̡Ӝ̵̨̄Ʒ > aprint ( "happy" ) # print art ۜ\(סּںסּَ` )/ۜ > aprint ( "random" ) # random 1-line art mode '(っ◕‿◕)っ ' > aprint ( "rand" ) # random 1-line art mode 't(-_-t) ' > aprint ( "woman", number = "22" ) # raise artError Traceback (most recent call last). This function print 1-line art in normal mode (return None) and raise artError in exception. > from art import * > art_1 = art ( "coffee" ) # return art as str in normal mode > print ( art_1 ) c > art_2 = art ( "woman", number = 2 ) # return multiple art as str > print ( art_2 ) ▓⚗_⚗▓ ▓⚗_⚗▓ > art ( "random" ) # random 1-line art mode '(っ◕‿◕)っ ' > art ( "rand" ) # random 1-line art mode 't(-_-t) ' > art ( 22, number = 1 ) # raise artError Traceback (most recent call last). This function return 1-line art as str in normal mode and raise artError in exception. ⚠️ ART 4.6 is the last version to support Bipartite art 1. Again, only the versions of such characters that appear in a clearly bigoted context would be considered hate symbols.⚠️ Some environments don't support all 1-Line arts Just as racist versions of “Pepe the Frog” and “Trollface” exist, so too do bigoted versions of some other cartoon images popularized by 4chan and similar sites, such as Wojak/Feels Guy. Only “Trollface” memes used in conjunction with Nazi, racist or anti-Semitic imagery or language would be considered hate symbols. The great majority of “Trollface” memes are not racist or anti-Semitic in nature and no one should assume that mere use of a “Trollface” image has a connection to white supremacy or bigotry. In some other versions, “Trollface” was depicted as a Jew. Inevitably, racist and anti-Semitic versions of the “Trollface” meme appeared, the most common of which pictured “Trollface” as a Nazi or as Adolf Hitler, or appearing in the context of Nazi imagery. The image became popular on 4chan itself, whose users created many versions of the image, often accompanied by phrases such as “Problem?” or “You mad, bro?” “Trollface” is a cartoon drawing of the head of a man with a large, malicious smile that has become, like “ Pepe the Frog,” one of the most well-known of the cartoon meme images popularized by websites such as 4chan.Īccording to the Know Your Meme website, “Trollface” originated in 2008 in a cartoon intended to mock the constant trolling on the website 4chan.
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