.\" Hey, EMACS: -*- nroff -*- .TH PARACODE 1 "2005-04-16" .SH NAME paracode \- command line Unicode conversion tool .SH SYNOPSIS .B paracode .RI [ -t tables ] string .SH DESCRIPTION This manual page documents the .B paracode command. .PP \fBparacode\fP exploits the full power of the Unicode standard to convert the text into visually similar stream of glyphs, while using completely different codepoints. It is an excellent didactic tool demonstrating the principles and advanced use of the Unicode standard. .PP \fBparacode\fP is a command line tool working as a filter, reading standard input in UTF-8 encoding and writing to standard output. .SH OPTIONS .TP .BI \-t tables .BI \-\-tables Use given list of conversion tables, separated by a plus sign. Special name 'all' selects all the tables. Note that selecting 'other', 'cyrillic_plus' and 'cherokee' tables (and 'all') makes use of rather esoteric characters, and not all fonts contain them. Special table 'mirror' uses quite different character substitution, is not selected automatically with 'all' and does not work well with anything except plain ascii alphabetical characters. Example: paracode -t cyrillic+greek+cherokee paracode -t cherokee output paracode -r -t mirror output Possible tables are: cyrillic cyrillic_plus greek other cherokee all .TP .BI \-r Display text in reverse order after conversion, best used together with -t mirror. .SH SEE ALSO iconv(1) .SH AUTHOR Radovan Garab\('ik