This tool generates text characters inside of circles or bubbles, with either dark or light backgrounds. These bubble characters can be used inside of Facebook or Twitter status updates, in emails, and elsewhere. You can use bubble text to indicate excitement, cause for celebration, or to denote something important.

Our bubble text generator uses characters from the "Enclosed Alphanumerics" and "Enclosed Alphanumeric Supplement" Unicode blocks. These characters were originally intended to function as numbered and lettered bullets in ordered lists. They provide a range of visually distinct and enclosed shapes that can be used as stylistic alternatives to traditional bullet points. While their original purpose was utilitarian, these enclosed characters have also found creative applications in various contexts. The "Bubble Text" generator utilizes the captivating and decorative nature of the enclosed characters to generate visually appealing and engaging text styles, adding a touch of whimsy and uniqueness to written content.


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When viewing the page in debug mode the text content is visible, so this just makes it a really annoying issue for development as it becomes harder to place elements in relation to the text as well as causing unnecessary delays due to deleting and recreating text elements or just searching for the element after the content has become invisible in the editor.

Yes, this is happening when font container is to short for a specific font size or when text line spacing option set wrongly, then text just pushed above or a below inside of the font container.

Not every time. I have a regular experience of changing the width of a text element that is prior to the width change displaying the text, then after a width change, the text is not visible. Then to copy the text within the text element editor dialogue and then pasting it back the text becomes visible again. It is a strange quirk.

group 1. - Set up as your example, works great with known # of characters.

group 2. - Set up as your example, but with more characters, expanding the element

group 3. - Text element using the same size as the parent group, No longer expanding the element, but text is no longer vertically centred within the group.

Hi,

When I make a speech bubble, it only lets me put the tail at the bottom. If I flip the speech bubble upside-down (so the tail is at the top) and then use the text tool to put text inside it, the text is also upside down.

Is there any way round this (ie, the bubble upside-down, the text right-way up) without having to use a separate bubble and text frame?

Before adding the text, reset the rotation of the bubble by Adding it to itself, but make sure that you have it adjusted as you want it first as that will convert it from a Shape (with all the control nodes) into a normal Curve object.

Layer hierarchy matters.

If you simply clip the text with the bubble, both elements will remain independently editable while behaving as a single object. You can fine-tune the relationship with the Constraints panel.

The speech bubble feature still lacks in some options, not only its aiming direction but also vertical text alignment can become hard to handle. Therefore it can be more useful not to use this shape object as text frame, too.

But it still ends up being two objects (one shape converted to a text frame & one not) so the Text Frame panel does not help with the rotation issue. It seems far simpler to do what @loukash suggested & just clip a regular text frame into the callout (or any other) shape.

What I mean is how can you set the rotation of the text independently of the rotation of (in this instance) the elliptical callout shape (and ideally also preserve the parametric adjustability of that shape).

Regardless, what I am asking is if there is any better way to rotate the text & shape independently & non-destructively (meaning not converting the shape to a curve or requiring any particular order of steps) than what @loukash suggested in the third post of this topic.

what I am asking is if there is any better way to rotate the text & shape independently & non-destructively (meaning not converting the shape to a curve or requiring any particular order of steps) than what @loukash suggested in the third post of this topic.

Honestly the answer is "No". The Callout shape object always is limited by 1 axis for its target tip, either vertically or horizontally. Also the workflow of Callout shape + nested text frame is affected and doesn't solve this problem, though it works efficiently for most situations.

On the other hand, you may also want to note that I've been using Designer in this thread all the way through, and deliberately so. Because "by design", you have no Text Frame panel in Designer (unless you know the "secret MacOS-only handshake") to even format a callout-ellipse-turned-to-text-shape. @Ratty hasn't specified which app they are using, so my solutions have attempted to remain "app agnostic".

Usability would be somewhat better if the callout shapes permitted rotating their tail ends 360 around the shape instead of just laterally across the width of the shape. But with only APub currently *officially* supporting the Text Frame panel, users that do not have it are still going to have to use a separate text object for their callouts to have any text (like they would for placing text in rectangles, ellipses, or other shape objects).

It was this macOS Preview experience which made me initially assume a bug in Affinity. Not only the target tail can move around 360 but also text area & target size are calculated separately and therefore a vertically centered text stays centered in the bubble, regardless of the tail size.

In comparison, not being able to rotate the tail 360 in the Affinity tools seems like more of an oversight than anything else. A built-in area for text placement seems more like a feature that if it existed should be implemented for all the shape tools, not just the two callout ones.

Today I went to send a text message to someone and as I was selecting the person from my contact list I noticed that one 1 of my contacts had a tiny blue speech bubble next to his name. I know that the blue speech bubbles when texting mean that you are using iMessage, but I don't know why this little icon appeared next to this contact's name. And why it would show up only next to his name and not next to any others' who have iMessage enabled. Any ideas what this symbol means?

I've read a lot of conflicting info re that tiny empty blue text bubble icon next to a contact - including the contributions above. My wife has a Blackberry (so no iMessage) and my son a Samsung/Android (so no iMessage), but both have the empty blue text bubble icon next to the telephone icon in their contact information in my iPhone. So the bubble has nothing to do with iMessage.

The little blue speech bubble became apparent to me after I was interrupted while typing a text message with a second text message. After responding to the second message, my original text was gone. Then, when I searched for the persons name to begin again, I noticed their name had a small blue speech bubble next to it, as if iMessage was trying to tell me there was a draft, or unsent message, waiting. I was unable to recover the original message, however, and had to start again. I restarted iMessage just to see what would happen and the bubble went away.

I think that I finally figured it out. The "speech bubble" appears when you have sent a recent imessage. I'm not sure of the actual time frame, but it could be within a 24 hour period because I went back to imessages from today and yesterday. The contacts where I sent an imessage in the morning didn't have a speech bubble, but those in the afternoon did.

I then checked my contacts and found one where I knew that they had an iPhone. There was no speech bubble, so I sent an imessage and then it appeared (she has a iPhone 4 and I have a 4s, so it doesn't matter the version).

Here's the answer: the tiny blue speech bubble appears if two conditions are met. First condition, the person has an iPhone and their iMessage capabilities are set up. And the second condition, the blue speech bubble appears, if YOU the texter, never officially terminated (stopped the message app from running in the background) the message app in that texting session.

How I tested this was to text myself. When I texted myself & went to start a new message (w myself) the tiny bubble appeared. So I erased the message. And started again, the same thing happened, tiny blue speech bubble was there. However when I terminated the app completely and then begin to once again send myself a message, the tiny blue speech bubble next to my name was GONE.

Hello, I am using ArcGIS Pro 3.0.3 and I am cannot get my text bubbles in a graphics layer to resize and become readable as I zoom in and out. I know it is possible and could copy and paste from other files, but I would like to know how to set it up myself. ff782bc1db

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