Description: Yahoo! Messnger 7 (with Voice) animated (or not) emoticons, including the "hidden" ones. There are two smileys that won't show in Kopete: blush(:"> and whistling(:-"). That is because Kopete doesn't seem to handle very well quote characters. Enjoy! Please report if there are any other smileys, but the ones mentioned above, that don't appear as they should.
the HTML entities.
For example to use a greater than symbol, use ampersand-gt; only change the ampersand- to just &. For a "double quote" use ampersand-quot;. Seems to work just fine here.
Hello. That's how I did do it and it still doesn't work here. Using " for the whistle and blush emoticons doesn't seem to deal with the problem. There's also another issue when receiving a hug emoticon (>:D<). Kopete won't display the hug emoticon only when sending it.
It might be just my Kopete or KDE's fault...
I just discovered that kopete will handle things like ">:D<", but only if it's not the first character in the line, and the preceding character is a space. Thus "hello>:D<" doesn't work, neither does ">:D<", but " >:D<" and "hello >:D<" do (note the leading spaces before the >).
Strange, but true.
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the HTML entities. For example to use a greater than symbol, use ampersand-gt; only change the ampersand- to just &. For a "double quote" use ampersand-quot;. Seems to work just fine here.
Hello. That's how did do it and it still doesn't work here. There's also another issue when receiving a hug emoticon (>:D
Hello. That's how I did do it and it still doesn't work here. Using " for the whistle and blush emoticons doesn't seem to deal with the problem. There's also another issue when receiving a hug emoticon (>:D<). Kopete won't display the hug emoticon only when sending it. It might be just my Kopete or KDE's fault...
I just discovered that kopete will handle things like ">:D<", but only if it's not the first character in the line, and the preceding character is a space. Thus "hello>:D<" doesn't work, neither does ">:D<", but " >:D<" and "hello >:D<" do (note the leading spaces before the >). Strange, but true.