Difference between revisions of "Emote"
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* '''[[Limits]]''' - Comprehensive numerical limits of the Second Life virtual world. | * '''[[Limits]]''' - Comprehensive numerical limits of the Second Life virtual world. | ||
* '''[[How far does my voice carry?]]''' - Earlier documentation from the Viewer 1.23 era. | * '''[[How far does my voice carry?]]''' - Earlier documentation from the Viewer 1.23 era. | ||
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Revision as of 02:51, 13 July 2010
You can add emotional nuances to their text chat by using "emotes". This can liven up conversation and reduce miscommunication.
This video tutorial quickly shows you how to use emotes:
<videoflash type="youtube">-c18cqU_reA|640|505</videoflash>
As shown, there are several special prefixes for emotes:
/me
Beginning a line of chat with /me
phrases it from your perspective. For example, if your name is Torley Linden and you enter:
/me looks delighted to emote
It appears to everyone as:
Torley Linden feels delighted to emote
/shout and /whisper
These are a couple "hidden" emotes that aren't visibly documented in the Viewer's user interface but have worked in some capacity for years: /shout
and /whisper
. Like /me
, begin a line of chat with the trigger.
Important: /shout and /whisper both autocomplete. This can conflict if you have other gestures or scripted gadgets that have triggers that begin similarly. A workaround is to backspace or paste in the command. |
/shout
- Can be heard by avatars within a 100m radius.
- You can also shout by completing your line of chat with Ctrl+Enter ↵.
- Shout is accompanied by an animation of your avatar cupping hands-to-mouth, similar to how you might shout in an exaggerated way in real life.
- Appears in bold.
/whisper
- Can be heard by avatars within a 10m radius.
- Appears in italics.
Emoticons
Related, you may be familiar with emoticons such as the popular smiley face :)
which can be typed in the chat bar alongside any other text. There are a tremendous variety with variations. For example, happiness is also expressed via ^^
, :o)
, and =^_^=
. Unicode symbols from other languages that appear to be emoting faces are also used, such as the popular ㋡
from Japanese, which appears to be a diagonally-tilted happy face.
Emoticons are often used in gestures. For example, there's a gesture which uses ":)
" as a trigger and automatically transforms it into the aforementioned "㋡
".
See also
- Awesomize your profile with Unicode and ASCII art
- Limits - Comprehensive numerical limits of the Second Life virtual world.
- How far does my voice carry? - Earlier documentation from the Viewer 1.23 era.
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