


Contact lingo jam generator#
To generate stylish and cool text you need to type or paste your text into the textbox and let the fancy text generator do its job.
Contact lingo jam free#
Note that currently you can only create regex replacement rules for FORWARD translations, so the regex always goes in the first column, and the string to replace it (which may include matched groups) goes in the second column.Fancy Text Generator⚡( Font Generator) is the most 𐤠ƊƲ𐤠ƝƇƸƊ online free tool to copy and paste cool ❝𝐬𝐭𝐲𝐥𝐢𝐬𝐡 𝐟𝐨𝐧𝐭𝐬❞ with various combinations of fancy font styles. Millions of people use the Fancy text generator as a fancy text maker to make cute fonts to copy and paste.
Contact lingo jam how to#
If you want to learn how to use more complex rules, Google will help. Now if the user types in "rainbow", it will be translated to "cakebow". In the first column, you put a regex rule, such as "/rain/g" (note the 'g' which specifies that ALL matches will be replaced, not just the first) and in the second column, you put in what you would like all the matches to be replaced with, for example "cake". Some examples are provided beneath the lists on the editor page. The syntax used by LingoJam is that of JavaScript (which is very similar to other types). There is almost nothing that cannot be done with a proper knowledge of regular expressions. Regex (short for 'regular expressions') basically lets you make your own rules. Remember that if you have enabled reverse translation, these rules also work in reverse when the user types into the language 2 box. Maybe you want to swap the leter 'a' for the number '4', so in the first column, you would put 'a' and in the second column you would put '4'. If you wanted to swap the "ea" in any words that contain it (for example, "heart", "create" etc.) you would put "ea" in the first column (language 1) and you would put "ae" in the second column (language 2). Intrawords (according to our definitions - feel free to suggest a better name!) are groups of letters that are within words. As usual, this works in reverse if you've enabled reverse translations and the user types in the language 2 box. We could make all words that end in "o" instead end in "ooo" - so your translator would translate "go" into "gooo" and it would translate "bilbo" into "bilbooo". The suffixes sections allows you to swap suffixes! Genius. Of course, the swaps work in reverse if you have enabled reverse translations and the user types in the language 2 box. If you put "s" in the first column, and "$" in the second column, the translator will look for all words that begin with "s" and make them instead begin with "$". This section allows you to exchange the start of words. The words lists are swapped after the phrases. Place words from language 1 in the first column, and words from language 2 in the second. Phrases are the first to be swapped during translation. In the first list, you place phrases from language 1, in the second list, you place the equivalent phrase for language 2. This section is comprised of two lists (like many of the following sections). Your email allows us to send you this link alond with any backups that you request. We instead give you a secure link with which you can edit your translator.

Here's a really quick run through of how to use LingoJam.
