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    Degrees C Symbol

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    • m5stackM
      m5stack @richardmckenna
      last edited by

      @richardmckenna The character " ° " is not in the range of ASCII code. So it cannot be displayed, maybe you can try to use " 'C " symbol instead, it will look more same

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      • R
        richardmckenna @m5stack
        last edited by

        @m5stack hmmm ok that's a shame.

        I don't suppose you can suggest any other way of displaying it? Would have thought it was a common thing to do given temperature applications are a popular thing for this kind of hardware.

        Is there any documentation on what characters are available? Or is it just the standard ASCII set but not the extended set?

        m5stackM 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • m5stackM
          m5stack @richardmckenna
          last edited by

          @richardmckenna You can refer to this Unicode example, but in fact it still does not support displaying " ° ", but will be able to display more characters. Please pay attention to the content of the notes when using.

          Github link: https://github.com/m5stack/M5Stack/tree/master/examples/Advanced/Display_Unicode

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          • R
            richardmckenna @m5stack
            last edited by

            @m5stack Thank you I will take a look.

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            • world101W
              world101
              last edited by

              I manually create the degree symbol by drawing a white circle and then a smaller black circle on top. But it takes some trial and error depending on your text size.

              0_1581727191781_7FD03DD7-6488-49BD-8880-252ED1225F89.png

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              • R
                richardmckenna @world101
                last edited by

                @world101 thanks. I think I will do this.

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                • P
                  peter153
                  last edited by

                  This post is deleted!
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                  • P
                    peter153
                    last edited by

                    This post is deleted!
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                    • P
                      peter153
                      last edited by

                      //Fake degrees C Symbol

                      String strTemp;
                      strTemp = String(temp1 + strtof(&adj1[0], NULL));
                      strTemp += " C";
                      
                      M5.Lcd.drawCentreString(strTemp,320/2,50,1);
                      //M5.Lcd.print(String(temp1 + strtof(&adj1[0], NULL))+"℃"); //broken --;
                      
                      int nTempLen=strTemp.length();
                      M5.Lcd.setTextSize(1);
                      M5.Lcd.setCursor(2, 50);
                      M5.Lcd.print("Sensor");
                      M5.Lcd.print(" 1");
                      if(nTempLen==6)
                      {
                      M5.Lcd.setCursor(195, 45);
                      }
                      else if(nTempLen==7)
                      {
                       M5.Lcd.setCursor(205, 45);
                      }
                      else if(nTempLen==8)
                      {
                       M5.Lcd.setCursor(216, 45);
                      }
                      else
                      {
                       M5.Lcd.setCursor(200, 45);
                      }
                      
                      M5.Lcd.setTextSize(2);
                      M5.Lcd.print("o"); //lowcase o
                      
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                      • world101W
                        world101
                        last edited by world101

                        Just an update. I noticed that uiFlow now supports Unicode characters. I'm not sure in which release it was introduced, but I'm now able to add the degree symbol to a label using characters from this site.

                        0_1597847503341_Screen Shot 2020-08-19 at 10.30.19 AM.png

                        0_1597847839632_IMG_1578.jpg

                        Two drawbacks...

                        • Size is fixed at unicode 24 (similar in size to DejaVu 24).
                        • Unicode 24 is missing from the label set font block
                          0_1597848114456_Screen Shot 2020-08-19 at 10.31.33 AM.png
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