Good story. I always look forward to your fiction.
>But it’s his first real date since his fiancée died.
Is it just me, or in this specific sentence, and that sentence alone, the “é” appears visibly larger/a slightly different font than the rest of the text? You won’t see it in my copied quote, that seems fine to me. I am mostly curious to know how that could even happen, unless you lack a keyboard with diacritics and tried copying and pasting from somewhere else.
Yup, seems good now. A quirk of preserved formatting when pasting was my guess anyway, I know the pains of juggling text into LW’s editor from multiple sources and in different formats. It’s a miracle it works at all.
On FireFox for Android, I can see this in “Marisol García” as well, though copy-and-pasting it appears to normalize. This may be an issue with a keyboard doing something like '+i instead of baking the character all at once, and LW not rendering all this in the correct font. I’ll try to look at home later.
No, “The woman’s name is Marisol García.” and a few mentions of “fiancée” are still messed up. I really think this is a LW thing and not a you thing and I’ll try to take it apart later and send a message to the team.
Possible, I’m on the latest Chrome for Android. The other copies of fiancée look just like fine, and so did the copied and pasted one in my quote. Looking closer, it’s probably the same font, just larger by like 2 or 3 points.
Imagine spending many hours on a beautiful and original short story. Imagine the excitement of seeing there are already so many comments! Imagine then seeing they are all about whether or not the é was correctly parsed.
Good story. I always look forward to your fiction.
>But it’s his first real date since his fiancée died.
Is it just me, or in this specific sentence, and that sentence alone, the “é” appears visibly larger/a slightly different font than the rest of the text? You won’t see it in my copied quote, that seems fine to me. I am mostly curious to know how that could even happen, unless you lack a keyboard with diacritics and tried copying and pasting from somewhere else.
I did copy and paste it from google to get the diacritics. Is it fixed now for you?
Yup, seems good now. A quirk of preserved formatting when pasting was my guess anyway, I know the pains of juggling text into LW’s editor from multiple sources and in different formats. It’s a miracle it works at all.
On FireFox for Android, I can see this in “Marisol García” as well, though copy-and-pasting it appears to normalize. This may be an issue with a keyboard doing something like
'+iinstead of baking the character all at once, and LW not rendering all this in the correct font. I’ll try to look at home later.Better now?
No, “The woman’s name is Marisol García.” and a few mentions of “fiancée” are still messed up. I really think this is a LW thing and not a you thing and I’ll try to take it apart later and send a message to the team.
Maybe an issue at your end?
It looks normal for me (10xed screenshot from the original, not from your quote):
edit: that’s from Chrome, but it’s normal for me in Firefox too.
Possible, I’m on the latest Chrome for Android. The other copies of fiancée look just like fine, and so did the copied and pasted one in my quote. Looking closer, it’s probably the same font, just larger by like 2 or 3 points.
Imagine spending many hours on a beautiful and original short story. Imagine the excitement of seeing there are already so many comments! Imagine then seeing they are all about whether or not the é was correctly parsed.
Hey, I had the courtesy to upvote and say it was a good story before nitpicking haha.
Like the story, the move from dialog critics to diacritics made me smile. So LW.
Same here
https://pasteboard.co/PMIClLjf8vtB.png