forked from mirrors/akkoma-fe
Docs: Change wrong documentation.
This commit is contained in:
parent
5ac2c365a7
commit
c0497b6f1f
1 changed files with 1 additions and 1 deletions
|
@ -33,7 +33,7 @@ will become
|
|||
Note that you can only use emoji defined on your instance, you cannot "copy" someone else's emoji, and will have to ask your administrator to copy emoji from other instance to yours.
|
||||
Lastly, there's two convenience options for emoji: an emoji picker (smiley face to the right of "submit" button) and autocomplete suggestions - when you start typing :shortcode: it will automatically try to suggest you emoj and complete the shortcode for you if you select one. **Note** that if emoji doesn't show up in suggestions nor in emoji picker it means there's no such emoji on your instance, if shortcode doesn't match any defined emoji it will appear as text.
|
||||
* **Attachments** are fairly simple - you can attach any file to a post as long as the file is within maximum size limits. If you're uploading explicit material you can mark all of your attachments as sensitive (or add `#nsfw` tag) - it will hide the images and videos behind a warning so that it won't be displayed instantly.
|
||||
* **Subject line** also known as **CW** (Content Warning) could be used as a header to the post and/or to warn others about contents of the post having something that might upset somebody or something among those lines. Several applications allow to hide post content leaving only subject line visible. As a side-effect using subject line will also mark your images as sensitive (see above).
|
||||
* **Subject line** also known as **CW** (Content Warning) could be used as a header to the post and/or to warn others about contents of the post having something that might upset somebody or something among those lines. Several applications allow to hide post content leaving only subject line visible. Using a subject line will not mark your images as sensitive, you will have to do that explicitly (see above).
|
||||
* **Visiblity scope** controls who will be able to see your posts. There are four scopes available:
|
||||
|
||||
1. `Public`: This is the default, and some fediverse software like GNU Social only supports this. This means that your post is accessible by anyone and will be shown in the public timelines.
|
||||
|
|
Loading…
Reference in a new issue