I absolutely love this, bonus: I can now read Cuneiform numbers, if I ever need that.
Suggestion: You can potentially show the Cuneiform time in the url.
sent at: π:ππ:ππ
OisinMoran 8 hours ago [-]
If you like weird clocks, I've got a collection of them here [0] which includes two others I've madeβthe QR Code Clock (probably my stupidest design of anything to date), and the vague clock (which is always correct and accurate but as it is just a single rotating "6" is only really legible at 6 and 9 o'clock)
It seems that of all the numbers (needed here), the symbol for 20 (π) is the only one that doesn't render on Android. Very odd. It does seem to be the last used codepoint (U+12399) in the Cuneiform block (U+12000βU+123FF) and they seem to stop rendering from U+1236E (on Android) which leaves 43 symbols un-rendered.
Okay, in the interim I have a shipped a fix for Android (seems fine on an iPhone emulation) that uses two tens like so "ππ" (looks like <<) instead of one twenty "π" (also looks like << but a bit tighter). This is definitely one of the weirdest patches [0] I've ever doneβchanging how an ancient language is displayed based on the specific type of incomprehensibly advanced technology it's being displayed onβbut I guess that's what Sundays are for.
Suggestion: You can potentially show the Cuneiform time in the url.
sent at: π:ππ:ππ
Currently working on my first physical one!
[0] https://lynkmi.com/oisin/Clocks
https://github.com/BarkyTheDog/catclock
Anyone any idea why that might be?
See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cuneiform_(Unicode_block) and https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cuneiform_Numbers_and_Punctuat...
sent at ππ:ππ:ππ
[0] https://github.com/OisinMoran/OisinMoran.github.io/commit/15...
See bug report https://issuetracker.google.com/issues/366415133
Firefox 139.0.4 on Arch Linux
I assume it's mostly down to fonts, but I don't know why a font would implement some of the cuneiform block without doing all of it.