 | Senior Member with 143 posts. | | Join Date: Nov 2004 Location: UK Experience: Beginner | | ICONS without TEXT please HELP I am currently running winME but want to have ICONS without text, is this possible with my operating system if so how. would someone be so good to tell a beginer how to do this in clear steps.
all suggestions gratefully apreciated. | | Senior Member with 268 posts. | | Join Date: Apr 2004 Location: Illinois Experience: learning every day | | hey blackcell! Just want you to know, I'm in NO WAY an expert on ANYTHING to do with computers .. but after reading your post, I googled. You might want to read this .. http://www.annoyances.org/exec/show/article02-137
It might be what you're wanting to know.
Have a good day! : )
__________________ make every day count .. *S* | | Distinguished Member with 2,229 posts. | | Join Date: Aug 2004 Location: Redondo Beach, CA Experience: Advanced | | Every icon has to have a unique name. You could use a combination of "invisible" characters if you want.
One invisible character is Alt+255
(Hold down the Alt key, and use the keypad to enter 255, then release the Alt key.) | | Distinguished Member with 54,745 posts. | | Join Date: Oct 2001 Location: *Random People Pleaser***Sacra Experience: Having fun | | | | | Moderator with 96,644 posts. | | Join Date: Oct 2002 Location: South Eastern PA, USA Experience: Advanced age & experience | | There are things like the Transparent Icons program mentioned that let you change the color of the text and the background. Guess what happens if you make them both the same color, or transparent? | | Senior Member with 668 posts. | | Join Date: Jan 2005 Location: California Experience: Intermediate | | This might work...doesn't say what windows version I copied this from lockergnome.com:
"If you would like some of your desktop Icons to have no text underneath then try this;
Right click the icon and select [Rename]
Name the icon Alt+255 and hit Enter
( this means you hold down the Alt key and type 255 then release the Alt key )
The text will be gone from the icon.
For each successive icon to have the text eliminated, repeat the above sequence adding an additional Alt+255 sequence. For example, the second no text icon would be 'renamed' Alt+255 Alt+255, the third no text icon Alt+255 Alt+255 Alt+255, etc.....Mind you I just tried it and ALT 255 was all I needed to do on each one on XP HOME."
Let me know if it works on your windows version please. | | Distinguished Member with 54,745 posts. | | Join Date: Oct 2001 Location: *Random People Pleaser***Sacra Experience: Having fun | | I just did it on 98SE and it did not work.
It still had a name because it put a _ in the space so it renamed it with a underline.
But doing it as you said for a 2nd. 3rd etc works but again it added the _ underline. | | Senior Member with 668 posts. | | Join Date: Jan 2005 Location: California Experience: Intermediate | | | | | Distinguished Member with 2,229 posts. | | Join Date: Aug 2004 Location: Redondo Beach, CA Experience: Advanced | | Hewee, and what happened when you typed Alt+255?
If nothing happened then you are probably using the keys on the main part of the keyboard (i.e. 2/@ and 5/%). You must only use the numeric keypad, and (usually) you must ensure that the "NumLock" is on.
Also, the character only appears AFTER you then let the Alt key go.
That Alt+255 character does work in all versions of Windows; it even works in DOS. It has been a trick used for many years.
To test to see if you are doing it right, try Alt+88, (again just using the numeric keypad). Alt+88 is the letter "X"
Last edited by ChuckE : 02-Apr-2005 01:58 PM.
| | Distinguished Member with 54,745 posts. | | Join Date: Oct 2001 Location: *Random People Pleaser***Sacra Experience: Having fun |
02-Apr-2005, 03:34 PM
#10 | It does not work Chuck. I did it just like you said. | | Moderator with 96,644 posts. | | Join Date: Oct 2002 Location: South Eastern PA, USA Experience: Advanced age & experience |
02-Apr-2005, 05:32 PM
#11 | hewee is correct, it doesn't work on W98, just tried it myself. It leaves a dash behind. | | Senior Member with 668 posts. | | Join Date: Jan 2005 Location: California Experience: Intermediate |
02-Apr-2005, 05:57 PM
#12 | Here's another attempt using different number... From here.
"Windows Tweak: Remove Desktop Icon Titles
Have you ever tried to completely remove the titles under your desktop icons? With certain Windows icons like “My Computer” and “Internet Explorer”, a simple rename using a single spacebar keystroke will do the trick, but not with most of your other programs. They need an actual name, and will revert back to their originals if you try to remove them completely.
Today’s tweak is a great trick that replaces text you can read with text your computer does not display. Windows will not let you name an icon with a single spacebar entry, but it will let you use the ASCII code for a space, which is 0160.
Here’s how you do it:
1. To rename your icon, right-click and choose Rename.
2. Erase all text.
3. Make sure the NumLock key in on. Hold down the Alt key while typing 0160 on your number pad.
4. After typing in 0160, let go of the Alt key. You’ll see a blank space inserted with your cursor.
5. Press Enter to save the new name.
This method gets more complicated when you want to remove the text of multiple icons. Since Windows still needs each icon to have a unique name, the above instructions should only work for one icon. A solution is to enter the ASCII code following directions 1-5, then repeating steps 1-5 again within the same icon (which will move the cursor two spaces). As long as each icon has a different “name”, you’ll get the same results"
Those of you with different windows versions, see if it works with the "space" Alt + number code. | | Distinguished Member with 2,229 posts. | | Join Date: Aug 2004 Location: Redondo Beach, CA Experience: Advanced |
02-Apr-2005, 06:01 PM
#13 | I also said "what happened?"
I also said try Alt+88, since an X ought to have been entered.
Maybe you "did it just like I said" maybe you didn't, I can't tell until you give me a clue as to what results when you do it.
Alt+(keypad number from 1 to 255) has been around since the original PC. I am pretty sure the special keystroke just didn't "jump" one version of an MS OS. I am also sure I have done it on a W98 PC, but I don't have one here to try it. I'll have to wait until Monday, where I can try on a PC at work. | | Distinguished Member with 2,229 posts. | | Join Date: Aug 2004 Location: Redondo Beach, CA Experience: Advanced |
02-Apr-2005, 06:21 PM
#14 | Quote: |
Originally Posted by jdl it will let you use the ASCII code for a space, which is 0160. | Actually ASCII 160 is the code for a NBSP (Non-breaking space).
The correct code for a space is ASCII 32.
The usual visable ACSII character set is from 33 to 126.
ASCII 32 is the space, and ASCII 127 is the Delete character.
Anything from 128 to 255 are characters that include European characters, block characters, things like copyright, plus.minus, etc.
Depending upon your character set and font, some of those characters require a leading 0, as in Alt-188 (a graphic double-corner generally used in DOS) vs. a Alt+0188 (¼) (one-fourth).
Much more detail of the characters can be found on the very informative and free ASCIIcat: http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/r_harvey/
There are also ASCII codes defined from ASCII 0 to 31, by, again depending upon the program you are in, and the font in use, those codes may appear - or not. (ASCII 3=♥ 5=♣ 6=• 9=○ 11=♂ 12=♀ etc.) | | Senior Member with 668 posts. | | Join Date: Jan 2005 Location: California Experience: Intermediate |
02-Apr-2005, 06:30 PM
#15 | [quote=ChuckE]Actually ASCII 160 is the code for a NBSP (Non-breaking space).
The correct code for a space is ASCII 32.[quote]
Very informative...
Do ANY of the space codes work to accomplish what the original poster, blackcell, wants to do? We've beat this thread to death with "stuff." He wanted to have no text in his desktop icons using winME. Have we solved his problem? Is anyone with WinME participating in the discussion? |  THIS THREAD HAS EXPIRED.
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