SJIS is Japanese ASCII Art
Japanese ASCII art images are created from characters within the Shift JIS character set, intended for Japanese usage. So, Japanese ASCII art is usually called Shift JIS, abbreviated to SJIS or AA, meaning ASCII art. However, it’s not typical/ standard ASCII art because it uses characters outside of those standard for ASCII text art. Shift JIS uses not only the ASCII character set, but also Japanese characters such as Kanji. Since there are thousands of Japanese characters, the images have more variety to them. However, they need to be viewed in the right font. Unlike traditional ASCII art (which works best with a monospaced font) Shift JIS art is designed around the proportional-width MS PGothic font supplied with Microsoft Windows. However, many characters used in Shift JIS art are the same width. This led to the development of the free Mona Font where each character is the same width as its counterpart in MS PGothic. SIJS art, like ANSI art and sometimes ASCII art, can be used to create animated text images using Adobe Flash files and animated GIFs. Shift_JIS has become popular and has even made its way into mainstream media and commercial advertising in Japan.
Sources for Japanese ASCII Art
- Text Mode: shiftJIS | Tumblr
- ASCII @4-ch
- Ascii Art Archives for Recylce
- Japanese Emoticons.me
- Japanese Ascii Art.image | Blogger
- Shift_JIS art – Wikipedia
The Mona Font
Mona Font is the Japanese proportional font used to view Japanese text art.
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Why the epic fail of displaying text as images???
Your comment was filtered into spam. I’ve posted about the text art display problem in other posts. Mainly it’s a formatting thing. Secondly it’s a problem with artist credit being removed, forgotten or taken.