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But Were Afraid To Ask
All You Ever Wanted To Know About Tilde (
'~' ) But Were Afraid To Ask
- The '~' character is Pronounced: Til- Dee
(or Til- Der or Til- Da).
- The '~' character is a web addressing
convention that means: "go to the web directory underneath the
home directory of the user name whose name (usually initials)
follows the '~'.
- Example: Web Addresses For
Julian H. Stacey: In my case, my login name
on berklix.com is jhs, so
http://www.berklix.com/~jhs
takes you to my login directory, where the Apache (web server) looks for a
default directory name of public_html & within that for a
default file name of index.html
- People on non American keyboards frequently have
difficulties, as there is No '~' key on
German keyboards (Manufacturers omitted it & other keys
such as < > [ ] | & re-arranged the keyboard,
adding German umlauts, legal section/ paragraph symbols etc (a
pain for Unix C programmers ! Even some German Unix C programmer friends
prefer American keyboards, & I a British Unix C programmer
for similar reason prefer American not English keyboard
layout.
- You can sometimes still get the '~' out
of the German keyboard, if you know the right combination with
Alt Grosse etc (But it might be tricky, There's not one but 4
German keyboard types (2 German & 2 Swiss German)
- Any Ascii character such as '~' you can't
find on your keyboard, you can generate long hand ! Just type
the percent % key and then the hexadecimal for the
character you want. eg '~' in the table below
is 7E, so this works:
http://www.berklix.com/%7Ejhs/
00 nul 01 soh 02 stx 03 etx 04 eot 05 enq 06 ack 07 bel
08 bs 09 ht 0a nl 0b vt 0c np 0d cr 0e so 0f si
10 dle 11 dc1 12 dc2 13 dc3 14 dc4 15 nak 16 syn 17 etb
18 can 19 em 1a sub 1b esc 1c fs 1d gs 1e rs 1f us
20 sp 21 ! 22 " 23 # 24 $ 25 % 26 & 27 '
28 ( 29 ) 2a * 2b + 2c , 2d - 2e . 2f /
30 0 31 1 32 2 33 3 34 4 35 5 36 6 37 7
38 8 39 9 3a : 3b ; 3c < 3d = 3e > 3f ?
40 @ 41 A 42 B 43 C 44 D 45 E 46 F 47 G
48 H 49 I 4a J 4b K 4c L 4d M 4e N 4f O
50 P 51 Q 52 R 53 S 54 T 55 U 56 V 57 W
58 X 59 Y 5a Z 5b [ 5c \ 5d ] 5e ^ 5f _
60 ` 61 a 62 b 63 c 64 d 65 e 66 f 67 g
68 h 69 i 6a j 6b k 6c l 6d m 6e n 6f o
70 p 71 q 72 r 73 s 74 t 75 u 76 v 77 w
78 x 79 y 7a z 7b { 7c | 7d } 7e ~ 7f del
If you are in Munich, ask Julian for his
business card: The ascii table is on the back.
PS Warning against using % character in URLs (URL = Uniform
Resource Locator = Web Reference ) to pictures
- People often want to shrink a picture to put on web, &
might call them eg room.jpg & house_shrunk_50%.jpg
Dangerous because we've just seen how % gets used above to
remap names. You likely would get away with that example, but
some browsers might fail with eg
television_picture_shrunk_50%625_line_format.jpg, as that might
get mapped to television_picture_shrunk_50b5_line_format.jpg.
Whether or not, depends how closely the browser conforms to the
syntax specification for URLS that presumably is somewhere
under http://w3c.org
- PS I suggest also be cautious if shrinking pictures eg 70%
as (I think it's called an anti-aliasing problem ?) eg small
font text in pictures might get really screwed, best shrink by
2 or 4 etc eg 50% or 75%.
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