World's simplest browser-based utility for adding symbols around letters in text. Load your text in the input form on the left, specify the left and right decorative symbols in the options, and you'll instantly get text with all letters wrapped in these decorative symbols in the output area. Powerful, free, and fast. Load text – decorate letters. Created by developers from team Browserling.
World's simplest browser-based utility for adding symbols around letters in text. Load your text in the input form on the left, specify the left and right decorative symbols in the options, and you'll instantly get text with all letters wrapped in these decorative symbols in the output area. Powerful, free, and fast. Load text – decorate letters. Created by developers from team Browserling.
With this online tool, you can surround each letter of the text with specific decorative characters. For example, you can turn the text "blue sky" into the text "(b)(l)(u)(e) (s)(k)(y)", "⊣b⊢⊣l⊢⊣u⊢⊣e⊢ ⊣s⊢⊣k⊢⊣y⊢", or "⋰b⋱⋰l⋱⋰u⋱⋰e⋱ ⋰s⋱⋰k⋱⋰y⋱". The symbol that is added before a letter can be specified in the "Left Symbol" option and the symbol that is placed after a letter can be entered in the "Right Symbol" option. In these options, you can enter the same character, such as "-" (in this case the text "blue sky" will turn into "-b--l--u--e- -s--k--y-") or different characters, such as brackets "[ ]", quotation marks "« »", decorative glyphs "⫷ ⫸", or even emojis "🌜 🌛". By default, only letters and digits are wrapped into symbols (that is, all lowercase letters a-z, all uppercase letters A-Z, and digits 0-9) however, if you need also wrap spaces, punctuation marks, or any other characters that appear in the input text, then you can specify them in the "Wrap Additional Characters" option. If this option is empty (and by default it's empty), then the text "No way!" will be converted into "(N)(o) (w)(a)(y)!". If you enter a space character and an exclamation mark in this option, then you'll get "(N)(o)( )(w)(a)(y)(!)" as the output. If you use the same wrapping character for the left and right sides, then by default you will get the same character repeated twice. For example, if your text is "red sea", and the wrapping character is "-" for both sides, then you will get the output "-r--e--d- -s--e--a-". If you activate the "Squish Repeated Symbols" option, then the repeated left and right characters between letters will be squished into a single character and the return value will be "-r-e-d- -s-e-a-". Textabulous!
With this online tool, you can surround each letter of the text with specific decorative characters. For example, you can turn the text "blue sky" into the text "(b)(l)(u)(e) (s)(k)(y)", "⊣b⊢⊣l⊢⊣u⊢⊣e⊢ ⊣s⊢⊣k⊢⊣y⊢", or "⋰b⋱⋰l⋱⋰u⋱⋰e⋱ ⋰s⋱⋰k⋱⋰y⋱". The symbol that is added before a letter can be specified in the "Left Symbol" option and the symbol that is placed after a letter can be entered in the "Right Symbol" option. In these options, you can enter the same character, such as "-" (in this case the text "blue sky" will turn into "-b--l--u--e- -s--k--y-") or different characters, such as brackets "[ ]", quotation marks "« »", decorative glyphs "⫷ ⫸", or even emojis "🌜 🌛". By default, only letters and digits are wrapped into symbols (that is, all lowercase letters a-z, all uppercase letters A-Z, and digits 0-9) however, if you need also wrap spaces, punctuation marks, or any other characters that appear in the input text, then you can specify them in the "Wrap Additional Characters" option. If this option is empty (and by default it's empty), then the text "No way!" will be converted into "(N)(o) (w)(a)(y)!". If you enter a space character and an exclamation mark in this option, then you'll get "(N)(o)( )(w)(a)(y)(!)" as the output. If you use the same wrapping character for the left and right sides, then by default you will get the same character repeated twice. For example, if your text is "red sea", and the wrapping character is "-" for both sides, then you will get the output "-r--e--d- -s--e--a-". If you activate the "Squish Repeated Symbols" option, then the repeated left and right characters between letters will be squished into a single character and the return value will be "-r-e-d- -s-e-a-". Textabulous!
In this example, we add angle brackets around each letter in James Clear's quote. We enter the "<" sign in the left-symbol option and the ">" sign in the right-symbol option, and in the output, we get the same quote but now angle brackets appear before and after each letter.
In this example, we use our program to turn the text about programming into an array of individual letters. An array is a synonym for a list, and what we actually get is a list of quoted letters. To do this, we wrap in quotation marks "" each letter of the text (including spaces and full stops that we enter in the "Wrap Additional Symbols" option). Additionally, in the "right wrapping symbol" option, we add a comma and a space character after the quote, so that the list was comma-separated and ready for use in programming.
In this example, we decorate a motivational quote with star emoji. We prepend a black four-pointed star "✦" to the left side of each letter and a white four-pointed star symbol "✧" to the right side of each letter. We also specify the exclamation mark "!" as an additional symbol that needs to be decorated so that it's also decorated with the stars.
In this example, we surrounded each character in the text with dashes "-" but as the dashes were added on both sides of each character, double-dashes "--" appeared. To avoid the repetition and accumulation of dashes, we activated the "Squish Repeated Symbols" option. This option ensures that if the same wrapper is appended on the left and right side of a character, then two repeated wrappers are squished together into one single wrapper.
You can pass input to this tool via ?input query argument and it will automatically compute output. Here's how to type it in your browser's address bar. Click to try!
Find Levenstein distance of two text fragments.
Create a list of all words in text.
Lemmatize all words in text.
Apply stemming to all words in text.
Add color to punctuation symbols in text.
Add color to letters in text.
Add color to words in text.
Add color to sentences in text.
Add color to paragraphs in text.
Add slight perturbations to the given text.
Mess up characters in your text.
Generate text using random words.
Generate lorem ipsum placeholder text.
Generate a crossword puzzle from the given words.
Convert English text to Braille writing system.
Convert Braille symbols to English text.
Convert text characters to their corresponding code points.
Convert numeric character code points to text.
Convert CSV data to plain text columns.
Convert plain text columns to a CSV file.
Create a list of all 3-grams.
Encode the entire text to a single number.
Decode text that was encoded as a number back to text.
Divide text into chunks of certain size.
Apply formatting and modification functions to text.
Count the number of punctuation marks and other sybmols in text.
Count the number of letters in text.
Count the number of sentences in text.
Count the number of paragraphs in text.
Apply text transformation rules to any text.
Analyze text for interesting patterns.
Add accent marks to text letters.
Add a counter before every letter in text.
Add a counter before every word in text.
Add a counter before every sentence in text.
Add a counter before every paragraph in text.
Interleave the letters or words of the given text fragments.
Mess up the spacing between letters in any text.
Extract all emails from text.
Extract all URLs from text.
Extract all numbers from text.
Extract all countries from text.
Extract all cities from text.
Convert text to punycode.
Convert punycode to text.
Encode text to Baudot encoding.
Decode Baudot-encoded text.
Encode text to base32 encoding.
Decode base32-encoded text.
Encode text to base45 encoding.
Decode base45-encoded text.
Encode text to base58 encoding.
Decode base58-encoded text.
Encode text to Ascii85 encoding.
Decode Ascii85-encoded text.
Encode text to base65536 encoding.
Decode base65536-encoded text.
Encode text to nettext encoding.
Decode nettext-encoded text.
Convert written text into natural sounding voice.
Convert a voice recording to text.
Encode text to UTF8 encoding.
Decode UTF8-encoded text.
Encode text to UTF16 encoding.
Decode UTF8-encoded text.
Encode text to UTF32 encoding.
Decode UTF32-encoded text.
Encode text to IDN.
Decode IDN-encoded text.
Convert text to Unix-to-Unix encoding.
Decode Unix-to-Unix-encoded text.
Convert text to Xxencoding.
Decode Xxencoded text.
Encode text to QP encoding.
Decode QP-encoded text.
Remove all HTML tags from Text.
Remove all XML tags from Text.
Remove new line symbols from the end of each text line.
Find the difference between two text fragments.
Generate various text typos.
Generate a mirror reflection of text.
Cut out a piece of text.
Grep text for regular expression matches.
Extract first symbols, words, or lines from text.
Extract last symbols, words, or lines from text
Return the first letter of each word in text.
Make every paragraph to be two paragraphs in the given text.
Create an image from all words in text.
Create a circle from all letters in text.
Create a spiral from all letters in text.
Create a circle from all words in text.
Create a matrix of any dimensions from letters in text.
Create a matrix of any dimensions from words in text.
Create a spiral from all words in text.
Split the input text into syllables.
Write any text on an LCD display (with LCD font).
Convert text to 2-dimensional drawing.
Convert text to 3-dimensional drawing.
Create a horizontally or vertically scrolling text.
Create a GIF animation of a text message.
Create a GIF animation that slowly reveals a text message.
Decode text using the wrong encoding and create garbled text.
Try to find original text from garbled mojibaked text.
Make text harder to read.
Generate the entire alphabet from a to z.
Print the alphabet in random order.
Delete swear words from text.
Edit text in a neat browser-based editor.
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We're Browserling — a friendly and fun cross-browser testing company powered by alien technology. At Browserling we love to make people's lives easier, so we created this collection of online text tools. Our tools are focused on getting things done and as soon as you load your text in the input of any of our tools, you'll instantly get the result. Behind the scenes, our online text tools are actually powered by our web developer tools that we created over the last couple of years. Check them out!