Look at the night sky in good weather. You will see there lots of stars. Stars have become one of the biggest symbols nowadays. And if you asking yourself how to do them, then read this article and you will discover how to type star symbols on your keyboard and a lot of another interesting things.
The Applications folder in Finder on Mac OS X Public Beta. Marcin Wichary/Guidebook Gallery. Mac OS X Public Beta also had some notable differences from Mac OS X and later macOS releases. One of the most obvious was the Apple logo was in the center of the menu bar, rather than the upper left.
Starry | ⋆ | ✢ | ✣ | ✤ | ✥ | ✺ | ✻ |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
✦ | ✧ | ✩ | ✰ | ✪ | ❄ | ❅ | |
✬ | ✭ | ✮ | ✯ | ❂ | ✫ | ✡ | |
★ | ✱ | ✲ | ✳ | ✴ | ❇ | ❋ | |
✵ | ✶ | ✷ | ✸ | ✹ | ✼ | ❆ |
The five-pointed red star (a pentagram without the inner pentagon) is a symbol of Communism and Socialism and represents the five fingers of the worker's hand, as well as the five continents (as traditionally counted). If the collinear edges of a regular six-pointed star are connected, so that two interlaced triangles are formed, a symbol results that is variously known as the hexagram, Star of David, or Shield of David. The six-points represent all twelve patriarchs or tribes. The two 'Triangles' are actually the letters 'Dalet' and 'Yud', the two letters assigned to Judah. The two triangles form a diamond, which is the gem assigned to Judah. The Arabic star is a punctuation mark developed to be distinct from the asterisk. The asterisk had existed in feudal times, and the original shape of the asterisk was six-pointed, each point like a teardrop coming from the center.
Choose your system to find out.
Configure your keyboard layout in Windows so that you can type all additional symbols you want as easy as any other text. Takes about 5-10 minutes to set things up, but you'll be typing like a boss. You can assign star symbols and any other text characters to your keyboard using this technique.
CharMap allows you to view and use all characters and symbols available in all fonts (some examples of fonts are 'Arial', 'Times New Roman', 'Webdings') installed on your computer. You can input star symbols using it.
Character Palette allows you to view and use all characters and symbols, including stars, available in all fonts (some examples of fonts are 'Arial', 'Times New Roman', 'Webdings') installed on your computer.
Unicode hex code | Symbol | Unicode hex code | Symbol |
272C | ✬ | 272D | ✭ |
272E | ✮ | 272F | ✯ |
2730 | ✰ | 2721 | ✡ |
22C6 | ⋆ | 2722 | ✢ |
2723 | ✣ | 2724 | ✤ |
2725 | ✥ | 274B | ❋ |
2726 | ✦ | 2727 | ✧ |
2729 | ✩ | 272A | ✪ |
272B | ✫ | 2605 | ★ |
There actually are 3 different ways to type symbols on Linux with a keyboard. But only third and fourth level chooser keys and unicode hex codes can produce star text symbols.
Character map allows you to view and use all characters and symbols available in all fonts (some examples of fonts are 'Arial', 'Times New Roman', 'Webdings') installed on your computer. It can also help you lookup Unicode codes for entering symbols with keyboard.
Following is a list of HTML and JavaScript entities for star symbols. In Javascript you should write like a = 'this u2669 symbol' if you want to include a special symbol in a string.
HTML entity | JS entity | Symbol | HTML entity | JS entity | Symbol |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
✬ | u272c | ✬ | ✭ | u272d | ✭ |
✮ | u272e | ✮ | ✯ | u272f | ✯ |
✰ | u2730 | ✰ | ✡ | u2721 | ✡ |
⋆ | u22c6 | ⋆ | ✢ | u2722 | ✢ |
✣ | u2723 | ✣ | ✤ | u2724 | ✤ |
✥ | u2725 | ✥ | ❋ | u274b | ❋ |
✦ | u2726 | ✦ | ✧ | u2727 | ✧ |
✩ | u2729 | ✩ | ✪ | u272a | ✪ |
✫ | u272b | ✫ | ★ | u2605 | ★ |
Configure your keyboard layout in Windows so that you can type all additional symbols you want as easy as any other text. Takes about 5-10 minutes to set things up, but you'll be typing like a boss. You can assign star symbols and any other text characters to your keyboard using this technique.
CharMap allows you to view and use all characters and symbols available in all fonts (some examples of fonts are 'Arial', 'Times New Roman', 'Webdings') installed on your computer. You can input star symbols using it.
This is a brief blog post describing my experience with automating Photoshop using Python.I am an experienced software developer, but had never really used Photoshop before. As you can tell from my wonderful programmer art in this post ;)
Here’s the Adobe documentation my work was based on.
Here’s a link to another project that could also be of interest. I have not used their code, but it looks very promising.
The sample code and repo source code have been tested on Python 2.7, but should work fine on Python 3.Source code
Some time ago we needed a solution to be able to quickly generate some product images using Photoshop.
The graphic designer wanted to combine 2 images into a final product image to be used for display their products online.
This was done manually in Photoshop and as expected was very time consuming and error prone.
The scenario described for generating an image might seem very simple, why use Photoshop at all, right? PIL, Skimage, OpenCV would work fine! Well in this case, there were some very fine transformations and image processing being done in Photoshop and the graphic designer needed all these features required in order to generate high-quality images using filter, shears and other exotic (for me at least) visual effects.
Prior to my involvement, the graphic designer had been looking for a way to simplify and automate this image generation process.An important feature that would be key to this work is the concept of Smart Objects
Smart objects in Photoshop allow you to ‘link’ 2 or more PSD files. Any changes made to the linked PSD are automatically made to any PSD linking to it!Basically you create a PSD file, and have one of the layers be a Smart Object. Then you link that Smart Object layer to another PSD.Afterwards when you open the background image and the product image in Photoshop, any changes you make to the product image, also are made in the background image.
Another cool thing about Smart Objects: all the transformations within the Smart Object layer are preserved, regardless of the changes you make to the source PSD.
This requires:
The manual steps for generating a final product image becomes:
As mentionned at the beginning, we will be using the Photoshop COM programming interface.The Photoshop reference PDF will be our guide in writing our automation scripts. Of course we could be doing this directly in VB script, but it is much more fun (and productive!) to use Python.
Here’s a basic sample that opens an image in Photoshop.
This works on Windows, but some other scripting language might be more appropriate for Mac OS.We will not be covering other platforms.
There is no headless mode when running Python/COM automation scripts.
Each script command actually translates to an action you see happen on the screen.I will get into this and other annoyances later.
Here is some basic sample code that illustrates the automated steps to generate our final product image, which is a star on a background of mountains.
Notice also that we duplicate the PSD documents once we open them. We do this in order not to accidentally change and save the original PSD files.
Important: working with Photoshop’s object containers is different than native Python lists and tuples. The indices are 1-based, so the first element of container has index=1 (as opposed to index=0 as per usual).
In order to make this a little less painful to use, we created a psd_utils.py source file.This file contains contains the Photoshop class to alleviate some of the boilerplate code.
As mentionned earlier, even though there are quite a few advantages to automating with Photoshop, there are also quite a few points to consider.
Photoshop scripts require running an actual instance of Photoshop and it’s main window will be visible on the desktop.
The Photoshop window should not be minimized while running a script. This might actually block Photoshop, and prevent your automated task from running properly.
If you make use of Copy/Paste commands in your script, this will hijack your clipboard, and prevent any other user/application from using it properly.
Photoshop tends to hang/freeze/crash periodically. The crashes are frequent on big batches of images and don’t seem to be related to RAM/CPU usage. Just restart your script and it will eventually run to completion just fine. Regardless of crashes, you can still make huge productivity gains from automating some tasks.
For all these reasons, we highly recommend that any automated tasks you create should run on a dedicated Windows PC. You don’t need a high end PC for most tasks and this will definitely make everyone more productive.
Of course, most of the code and samples discussed here are related to the specific use case described.Almost all Photoshop commands can be scripted this way. The sample code should help you get started, and more details can be found in Photoshop scripting reference.If you need any help with your project, we will gladly share our expertise if required!