78

In a technical environment it's more than common to copy/paste configuration files, URLs, code samples and such in order to inform the other chat participant about something. In that case all kinds of combination of characters may be used, even ones Skype recognises as emoticons.

Example with a URL:

http://your.host/app/search?pattern=mine:*

The :* causes Skype to show a kissing emoticon, which obviously is completely pointless here.

How do I escape the : or * or whatever to avoid that? Note that I don't want to turn off emoticons or delete the emoticon-folder as that would only make me see the clear text, but any other chat partner still sees the emoticons. Everybody should see the plain text exactly as I intended no matter how he/she configured Skype.

sjngm
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  • In the typical Microsoft fashion, the only way to escape the formatting is through some proprietary methods. The standard way of escaping using backslashes `\ ` simply would not work. As a programmer, I'm quite used to using backslash to escape special characters (including the backslash). Alas, no joy in Skype... – ADTC Apr 12 '16 at 03:19

3 Answers3

95

You can use the new* Skype feature for doing this:

!! Preformatted text: Use two exclamation marks and a whitespace (<Space> or linebreak)
as the first 3 characters of your message and paste your snippet after it.
Example: This is (not) a kissing smiley! :*

You can also use these commands to turn this on or off:

/wikimarkup off                 // Text will not be converted.
/wikimarkup on                  // Text will be converted.

Turning conversion off (e.g. with !! ) disables the following formatting features, among others:

* bold *
~ strikethrough ~
_ italic _

and it also displays URL without formatting them to clickable hyperlinks or displaying the site's thumbnail as an image.

* It's available in the latest version on Windows 8 & Windows 7 (Skype version 6.22.81.105 onwards).

István Zachar
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sudhansu63
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    Cool. I have just updated and it only found version 6.22.0.107 for my Win7. Anyway, it works there, too :) – sjngm Dec 05 '14 at 07:14
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    The `!! ` prefix yields a monospaced font. – Aaron Thoma Jun 02 '15 at 10:56
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    Please suggest `@@ ` in the answer because `!! ` results in a monospace font. We don't want our message to look like code just because we didn't want it to be auto-formatted. – ADTC Apr 12 '16 at 02:07
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    Skype formatting seems to have changed radically in the new Skype included as part of Windows 10 (I'm on Skype 12.7.597.0), in which these methods no longer seem to work. I have asked a new question at [Do not insert emoticons into sent messages in Skype version 12](https://superuser.com/questions/1265799/do-not-insert-emoticons-into-sent-messages-in-skype-version-12) – Silverfish Nov 06 '17 at 16:31
  • For me `!!` gives monospace font but does not disable `*bold*`. This is using the linux version (skype 8.13.*) – AnnanFay Jan 31 '18 at 14:37
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    @Silverfish: I can confirm this no longer works in Windows 10. I've posted [an answer](https://superuser.com/a/1347373/109305) to that question, which is to trip up Skype's parser by inserting a very narrow whitespace character (Unicode 8205). – Amos M. Carpenter Aug 09 '18 at 02:30
  • @AmosM.Carpenter - in Windows 10, as of 8.44.0.40, `!! ` works - ***if on a line by itself*** - I prepared the desired multi-line text ahead of time in notepad, complete with the exta `!! ` line in front of it, pasted it as one operation. – ToolmakerSteve May 06 '19 at 20:21
54

As stated here, you can use either @@  (note the space after @) at the beginning of the message to override formatting, or !!  to send message in monospace font.

By wrapping parts of your message in {code} tags you can apply !! to those parts, i.e. Here is the {code}monospaced{code} word in a proportional message!

EDIT 2020: updated the link to the official FAQ, and added {code} tag description.

Oleksii Taran
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5

Since the @@ does not always work (at least it doesn't for me in Skype Web, as of Jan. 2019), you can suppress the formatting and keep the normal proportional font by inserting the special characters as HTML escapes.

E.g. using &#x7e;test&#x7e; you will see ~test~ (and not test)

Alberto M
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