• Unwanted emojis

    From John Hill@21:1/5 to All on Mon Mar 7 09:03:06 2022
    The Frequently Used section of emojis on this iPad is cluttered with emojis selected in error, mostly only once. Is there any way to clear them out?
    John.

    --
    Winning isn't everything, but losing isn't anything - Snoopy.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Lewis@21:1/5 to John Hill on Mon Mar 7 11:38:01 2022
    In message <t04hoa$8bv$1@dont-email.me> John Hill <yclept@outlook.com> wrote:
    The Frequently Used section of emojis on this iPad is cluttered with emojis selected in error, mostly only once. Is there any way to clear them out?

    Use other emojis.


    --
    "Are you pondering what I'm pondering?"
    "I think so, Brain, but shouldn't the bat boy be wearing a cape?"

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wade Garrett@21:1/5 to Lewis on Mon Mar 7 13:16:50 2022
    On 3/7/22 6:38 AM, Lewis wrote:
    In message <t04hoa$8bv$1@dont-email.me> John Hill <yclept@outlook.com> wrote:
    The Frequently Used section of emojis on this iPad is cluttered with emojis >> selected in error, mostly only once. Is there any way to clear them out?

    Use other emojis.


    Why would anyone much older than 15 or 16 use emojis? Back in junior
    high school, the girls would draw litle circles or hearts-- instead of
    dots-- over an i.

    The Egyptians developed hieroglyphics 5000 years ago and are more
    expressive than emojis!

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From John Hill@21:1/5 to Lewis on Mon Mar 7 18:16:11 2022
    Lewis <g.kreme@kreme.dont-email.me> wrote:
    In message <t04hoa$8bv$1@dont-email.me> John Hill <yclept@outlook.com> wrote:
    The Frequently Used section of emojis on this iPad is cluttered with emojis >> selected in error, mostly only once. Is there any way to clear them out?

    Use other emojis.



    Is there a limit to the number? Anyway, I only want to use three or four,
    I'm not really emoji aware. The rest are clutter.

    John.

    --
    Winning isn't everything, but losing isn't anything - Snoopy.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From John Hill@21:1/5 to Wade Garrett on Mon Mar 7 19:51:30 2022
    Wade Garrett <Wade@cooler.net> wrote:
    On 3/7/22 6:38 AM, Lewis wrote:
    In message <t04hoa$8bv$1@dont-email.me> John Hill <yclept@outlook.com> wrote:
    The Frequently Used section of emojis on this iPad is cluttered with emojis >>> selected in error, mostly only once. Is there any way to clear them out?

    Use other emojis.


    Why would anyone much older than 15 or 16 use emojis? Back in junior
    high school, the girls would draw litle circles or hearts-- instead of
    dots-- over an i.

    The Egyptians developed hieroglyphics 5000 years ago and are more
    expressive than emojis!



    True. But I'm far too old to learn hieroglyphs. A smiley face 😊 and a sad one ☚ī¸, and maybe a heart ❤ī¸ is about all I need. The rest were picked up
    by accident.

    John.

    --
    Winning isn't everything, but losing isn't anything - Snoopy.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Jolly Roger@21:1/5 to John Hill on Mon Mar 7 21:00:17 2022
    On 2022-03-07, John Hill <yclept@outlook.com> wrote:
    The Frequently Used section of emojis on this iPad is cluttered with emojis selected in error, mostly only once. Is there any way to clear them out? John.

    Not that I know of. Over time as you use others, the ones you don't use
    will be replaced by the ones you use more often. I suppose if it truly
    bothers you (first world problems, indeed), you could open a notepad and
    type ones you prefer a few times to speed up that process.

    --
    E-mail sent to this address may be devoured by my ravenous SPAM filter.
    I often ignore posts from Google. Use a real news client instead.

    JR

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Lewis@21:1/5 to John Hill on Mon Mar 7 21:01:21 2022
    In message <t05i5b$d1h$1@dont-email.me> John Hill <yclept@outlook.com> wrote:
    Lewis <g.kreme@kreme.dont-email.me> wrote:
    In message <t04hoa$8bv$1@dont-email.me> John Hill <yclept@outlook.com> wrote:
    The Frequently Used section of emojis on this iPad is cluttered with emojis >>> selected in error, mostly only once. Is there any way to clear them out?

    Use other emojis.



    Is there a limit to the number?

    The favorites category is a grid of 6 columns and 5 rows, so the most
    used top 30 emojis will be ther, though there is a weighting for more
    recently used emojis.

    Anyway, I only want to use three or four,

    Then they will be the first 3 or 4. I do not know of anyway to clear the favorites.

    I'm not really emoji aware. The rest are clutter.

    Afte you type a message, tap the emoji button and some words will be highlighted with possible emoji replacements. You might find you like
    them more if you use them.

    I find the skull and corssbones, check mark, coffe cup, ? and !?, thumbs
    up, woman shrugging, top hat, and various faces to be quite useful. Oh,
    and the 100 emoji, I use that one a lot.

    John.



    --
    "Are you pondering what I'm pondering?"
    "I think so, Brain, but Ben Vereen never answered our proposition."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Lewis@21:1/5 to Wade Garrett on Mon Mar 7 21:02:29 2022
    In message <t05i6k$dqq$1@dont-email.me> Wade Garrett <Wade@cooler.net> wrote:
    On 3/7/22 6:38 AM, Lewis wrote:
    In message <t04hoa$8bv$1@dont-email.me> John Hill <yclept@outlook.com> wrote:
    The Frequently Used section of emojis on this iPad is cluttered with emojis >>> selected in error, mostly only once. Is there any way to clear them out?

    Use other emojis.


    Why would anyone much older than 15 or 16 use emojis?

    Because they are useful and fast.


    --
    I gotta call my glitter guy

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Jolly Roger@21:1/5 to John Hill on Mon Mar 7 21:04:15 2022
    On 2022-03-07, John Hill <yclept@outlook.com> wrote:
    Lewis <g.kreme@kreme.dont-email.me> wrote:
    In message <t04hoa$8bv$1@dont-email.me> John Hill <yclept@outlook.com> wrote:
    The Frequently Used section of emojis on this iPad is cluttered with
    emojis selected in error, mostly only once. Is there any way to
    clear them out?

    Use other emojis.

    Is there a limit to the number?

    I doubt that. It's pretty much a one-size-fits-all feature.

    --
    E-mail sent to this address may be devoured by my ravenous SPAM filter.
    I often ignore posts from Google. Use a real news client instead.

    JR

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Lewis@21:1/5 to Lewis on Mon Mar 7 21:08:49 2022
    In message <slrnt2csl1.aou.g.kreme@m1mini.local> Lewis <g.kreme@kreme.dont-email.me> wrote:
    I find the skull and corssbones, check mark, coffe cup, ? and !?, thumbs
    up, woman shrugging, top hat, and various faces to be quite useful. Oh,
    and the 100 emoji, I use that one a lot.

    ☠ī¸ ✅ ☕ ❓⁉ī¸ 👍🤷‍♀ī¸ 🎩 đŸ¤Ŧ đŸ˜ĸđŸ˜†đŸ’¯ 💩👎🏆


    My terminal doesn't seem to understand the woman shrugging emoji.


    --
    Happy Jack wasn't tall, but he was a man

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Jolly Roger@21:1/5 to Wade Garrett on Mon Mar 7 21:13:12 2022
    On 2022-03-07, Wade Garrett <Wade@cooler.net> wrote:
    On 3/7/22 6:38 AM, Lewis wrote:
    In message <t04hoa$8bv$1@dont-email.me> John Hill <yclept@outlook.com> wrote:
    The Frequently Used section of emojis on this iPad is cluttered with emojis >>> selected in error, mostly only once. Is there any way to clear them out?

    Use other emojis.

    Why would anyone much older than 15 or 16 use emojis?

    Because they allow them to communicate with less effort than typing out
    words. Duh. Apparently the entire concept of emojis just flew right over
    your head, eh? Poor chap. BTW, there's nothing particularly juvenile
    about emojis, nor is it rational to carp at those over 15 or 16 who
    happen to use them. If my dear, old mom decides to send an occasional
    heart my way, I personally see no reason to object.

    Back in junior high school, the girls would draw litle circles or
    hearts-- instead of dots-- over an i.

    Headline: Human beings of various ages often find novel ways of
    communicating with each others without written words. More news at 10.

    The Egyptians developed hieroglyphics 5000 years ago and are more
    expressive than emojis!

    Yes, well I'm definitely looking forward to seeing your hieroglyph
    keyboard become a raging success.

    --
    E-mail sent to this address may be devoured by my ravenous SPAM filter.
    I often ignore posts from Google. Use a real news client instead.

    JR

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wade Garrett@21:1/5 to Jolly Roger on Mon Mar 7 18:39:47 2022
    On 3/7/22 4:13 PM, Jolly Roger wrote:
    On 2022-03-07, Wade Garrett <Wade@cooler.net> wrote:
    On 3/7/22 6:38 AM, Lewis wrote:
    In message <t04hoa$8bv$1@dont-email.me> John Hill <yclept@outlook.com> wrote:
    The Frequently Used section of emojis on this iPad is cluttered with emojis
    selected in error, mostly only once. Is there any way to clear them out? >>>
    Use other emojis.

    Why would anyone much older than 15 or 16 use emojis?

    Because they allow them to communicate with less effort than typing out words. Duh. Apparently the entire concept of emojis just flew right over
    your head, eh? Poor chap. BTW, there's nothing particularly juvenile
    about emojis, nor is it rational to carp at those over 15 or 16 who
    happen to use them. If my dear, old mom decides to send an occasional
    heart my way, I personally see no reason to object.

    Back in junior high school, the girls would draw litle circles or
    hearts-- instead of dots-- over an i.

    Headline: Human beings of various ages often find novel ways of
    communicating with each others without written words. More news at 10.

    The Egyptians developed hieroglyphics 5000 years ago and are more
    expressive than emojis!

    Yes, well I'm definitely looking forward to seeing your hieroglyph
    keyboard become a raging success.

    Judging by the quality and insightfulness of your many technical posts,
    you're a pretty bright guy. Surprising that you missed the point here ;-)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Your Name@21:1/5 to Wade Garrett on Tue Mar 8 12:48:41 2022
    On 2022-03-07 18:16:50 +0000, Wade Garrett said:

    On 3/7/22 6:38 AM, Lewis wrote:
    In message <t04hoa$8bv$1@dont-email.me> John Hill <yclept@outlook.com> wrote:
    The Frequently Used section of emojis on this iPad is cluttered with
    emojis selected in error, mostly only once. Is there any way to clear
    them out?

    Use other emojis.

    Why would anyone much older than 15 or 16 use emojis?

    Because it's the only way to actually denote emotions when using text, especially plain text. If someone posts:
    Oi, jerk!
    then there's little context. You can guess they're mad by the
    exclamation mark, but it is only a guess. If they post:
    Oi, jerk! X-(
    then it is more obvious that they're mad, whereas posting:
    Oi, jerk! ;-)
    then it is more obvious that they are simply joking.

    It's similar in the real world where facial expressions and voice tone
    are used to add context to spoken phrases (e.g. "Oi, Jerk!" with a
    scowl and growling tone means mad, but with a big grin or a wink with a
    jovial tone means joking).



    Back in junior high school, the girls would draw litle circles or
    hearts-- instead of dots-- over an i.

    The Egyptians developed hieroglyphics 5000 years ago and are more
    expressive than emojis!

    The Egyptians did use them thousands of years ago, but they're
    meaningless to anyone today. Modern archeologists have largely simply
    guessed at the translations, depsite things like the Rosetta Stone.
    Similarly with the Mayans (hence the "end of the world" in 2000) and
    many other dead written languages.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Jolly Roger@21:1/5 to Wade Garrett on Tue Mar 8 04:03:22 2022
    On 2022-03-07, Wade Garrett <Wade@cooler.net> wrote:
    On 3/7/22 4:13 PM, Jolly Roger wrote:
    On 2022-03-07, Wade Garrett <Wade@cooler.net> wrote:
    On 3/7/22 6:38 AM, Lewis wrote:
    In message <t04hoa$8bv$1@dont-email.me> John Hill <yclept@outlook.com> wrote:
    The Frequently Used section of emojis on this iPad is cluttered
    with emojis selected in error, mostly only once. Is there any way
    to clear them out?

    Use other emojis.

    Why would anyone much older than 15 or 16 use emojis?

    Because they allow them to communicate with less effort than typing
    out words. Duh. Apparently the entire concept of emojis just flew
    right over your head, eh? Poor chap. BTW, there's nothing
    particularly juvenile about emojis, nor is it rational to carp at
    those over 15 or 16 who happen to use them. If my dear, old mom
    decides to send an occasional heart my way, I personally see no
    reason to object.

    Back in junior high school, the girls would draw litle circles or
    hearts-- instead of dots-- over an i.

    Headline: Human beings of various ages often find novel ways of
    communicating with each others without written words. More news at
    10.

    The Egyptians developed hieroglyphics 5000 years ago and are more
    expressive than emojis!

    Yes, well I'm definitely looking forward to seeing your hieroglyph
    keyboard become a raging success.

    Judging by the quality and insightfulness of your many technical
    posts, you're a pretty bright guy. Surprising that you missed the
    point here ;-)

    Your primary point seems to be that people who happen to use emojis are supposedly immature. That's utterly lame, but isn't out of character for
    you or your best buddy trolls here. ; )

    --
    E-mail sent to this address may be devoured by my ravenous SPAM filter.
    I often ignore posts from Google. Use a real news client instead.

    JR

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Lewis@21:1/5 to Wade Garrett on Tue Mar 8 04:48:27 2022
    In message <t06545$brm$1@dont-email.me> Wade Garrett <Wade@cooler.net> wrote:
    On 3/7/22 4:13 PM, Jolly Roger wrote:
    On 2022-03-07, Wade Garrett <Wade@cooler.net> wrote:
    On 3/7/22 6:38 AM, Lewis wrote:
    In message <t04hoa$8bv$1@dont-email.me> John Hill <yclept@outlook.com> wrote:
    The Frequently Used section of emojis on this iPad is cluttered with emojis
    selected in error, mostly only once. Is there any way to clear them out? >>>>
    Use other emojis.

    Why would anyone much older than 15 or 16 use emojis?

    Because they allow them to communicate with less effort than typing out
    words. Duh. Apparently the entire concept of emojis just flew right over
    your head, eh? Poor chap. BTW, there's nothing particularly juvenile
    about emojis, nor is it rational to carp at those over 15 or 16 who
    happen to use them. If my dear, old mom decides to send an occasional
    heart my way, I personally see no reason to object.

    Back in junior high school, the girls would draw litle circles or
    hearts-- instead of dots-- over an i.

    Headline: Human beings of various ages often find novel ways of
    communicating with each others without written words. More news at 10.

    The Egyptians developed hieroglyphics 5000 years ago and are more
    expressive than emojis!

    Yes, well I'm definitely looking forward to seeing your hieroglyph
    keyboard become a raging success.

    Judging by the quality and insightfulness of your many technical posts, you're a pretty bright guy. Surprising that you missed the point here ;-)

    The point was "Old man screams at yoots" and it's a boring point.


    --
    "Are you pondering what I'm pondering?"
    "Wuh, I think so, Brain, but how will we get three pink flamingos
    into one pair of Capri pants?"

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)