2025-07-23

漫画 butt study

 Manga Index 

Inspired by some stuff on Rick & Morty (Supernova, et al)



2025-07-07

Hebrew Alphabet

 


Note the five letters than may end a word. One, FEH, does not seem to appear as a syllable-initial sound. The kaki-jun 書き順 (writing direction) is kind of decipherable, but it will probably need to be investigated in a video or something soon. I tried writing them all, including the cursive, and it seemed to go okay. Comparing the printed and cursive letters gives a clue as to the kaki-jun. 

One yikes is that the alphabet seems to be a kind of syllabary, with YOD being a kind of semi-letter, and a related yikes is that there seem to be duplications of initial sounds, notably K, e.g., KAF, KHET, and QOF, as well as TET, TAV, and perhaps TSADI, not to mention ALEPH and AYIN. In Japanese (and Korean) you'd see five letters starting with K, T, or A, whereas in Hebrew there may be more "loading" on some sounds than on others. On the Japanese syllabary again, I noticed that the examples for  ZAYIN and SAMEKH are, respectively "Zer" (bouquet) and "Seret" (movie). I noticed that the ZAYIN has the lower double-dot diacritical, while the SAMEKH has the lower triple-dot one, suggesting that these two letters do not have the same "default" vowel expression, and further, that they each reach the "e" vowel potential by different routes, implying that the diacriticals are context-based, i.e., double-dot does not mean "eh" nor does triple-dot, but only produces the same vowel, if indeed it is the same vowel in "Zer" and "Seret". Anyway, it seems there may be a lot to unpack here.

2025-07-06

Infant Phimosis

 In most infants, the foreskin is naturally adhered to the glans (head) of the penis at birth, and this is a completely normal anatomical condition. The separation of the foreskin from the glans is a gradual process that can take several years.



Typical Timeline of Foreskin Separation:



  • At birth: In about 96%–99% of newborn males, the foreskin is still fused to the glans.
  • By age 1: Around 50% of boys may still have the foreskin attached.
  • By age 3: About 10%–20% still have non-retractable foreskins due to natural adhesion.
  • By age 5–7: Most boys (~90%) have a foreskin that is at least partially retractable.
  • By puberty (age 12–16): Nearly all boys (~99%) will have complete separation and retractability of the foreskin.




Key Notes:



  • This process is natural and should not be rushed.
  • No retraction should be attempted by caregivers or medical personnel in infants or young children—it can cause pain, bleeding, or scarring.
  • The term for this natural condition is physiologic phimosis, and it is not a medical problem unless it causes symptoms like infection or urination issues.



If you’re caring for an infant or child, the general guideline is to clean only what is visible—gently washing the external penis with water—and allow the foreskin to separate on its own over time.


2025-07-03

模倣子 making table of contents

You’re right to revisit this—it’s a common desire in longer documents, but Google Docs doesn’t natively support page number–based anchoring the way some advanced word processors (like LaTeX or MS Word) do. However, here are the best available workarounds and techniques to achieve something close:





✅ Option 1: Use 

Headings with Bookmarks and Links



You can link to a heading or a bookmark, which brings the reader to the right spot—though not to a specific page number.


Steps:


  1. Highlight the text or heading you want to link to.
  2. Click Insert > Bookmark.
  3. At the referring point (where you want to make the link), highlight the text, click Insert > Link, and choose the bookmark.



Pro: Clickable and easy to use

Con: Doesn’t show the page number automatically





✅ Option 2: Use a Table of Contents (TOC)



Google Docs can generate a TOC with page numbers.


Steps:


  1. Use Heading styles (Heading 1, 2, etc.) throughout your doc.
  2. Go to where you want the TOC.
  3. Click Insert > Table of contents and choose a format that shows page numbers.



Pro: Shows page numbers and links

Con: Not flexible for individual cross-references within body text





❌ No Native Cross-References with Page Numbers



Unlike MS Word’s cross-reference feature, Google Docs doesn’t have:


  • A way to insert a reference like “see section X on page Y”
  • Automatic updating if the target moves






🛠️ Workaround: Manual Anchors with Page Numbers



You can manually type something like:


“See Section 3.2 on page 12.”


Then if you update the doc, you’ll need to:


  1. Scroll to the destination
  2. Note the current page number
  3. Update the number manually



It’s tedious, but can be made easier if you:


  • Mark the anchors with bookmarks or colored text
  • Use Ctrl+F and naming conventions (e.g. “@@anchor_section_3_2”)






🧪 Advanced Hack (Using Google Apps Script)



If you’re up for scripting, a custom Google Apps Script can:


  • Scan bookmarks or headings
  • Retrieve their current page number
  • Auto-update a text placeholder elsewhere



But: page numbers are tricky in Google Docs APIs—they’re rendered dynamically, so exact page references are unreliable.





Summary:


Method

Page Number

Link

Auto-Update

Bookmark + Link

Table of Contents

✅ (when refreshed)

Manual

Apps Script

❓ (complex)

✅ (if coded well)




Let me know your exact use case (e.g., citing sections, building an index, etc.) and I can tailor a more precise method—or build a macro/script to help automate it.


===============

Thanks! Since you’re working on a book in Google Docs and want both a full table of contents and smaller local TOCs, here’s how to do it cleanly—with some tips on page number references for diagrams.





✅ 1. 

Full Table of Contents (Chapters + Subsections)




Use Heading Styles



Apply:


  • Heading 1 for chapters
  • Heading 2 for sections
  • (Optional) Heading 3 for sub-sections




Insert TOC



At the start of your doc (or a dedicated TOC page):


  • Click Insert > Table of contents
  • Choose a style with page numbers (recommended)






✅ 2. 

Local TOCs Within Chapters



You can create smaller TOCs in each chapter this way:



Steps:



  1. Scroll to where you want the mini TOC (e.g., top of Chapter 3).
  2. Insert another TOC (Insert > Table of contents).
  3. It will include all headings in the document by default.




🪄 

Trick to Make It Local Only:



  • Use custom heading styles, like “Chapter 3 Heading 2” for subsections.
  • Then temporarily remove all other heading styles, insert the TOC, and then undo the style removal.
  • This is clunky, so another option:



Use a manual list of links for local TOCs.

Create a bullet list of links to just the relevant sections:


  • 3.1 Overview
  • 3.2 How It Works
    Use bookmarks or just link to heading text.






✅ 3. 

“See page X” for Diagrams or Sections



Unfortunately, Google Docs doesn’t support dynamic page number references. But here are your best options:



Option A: Manual Labels



Place a label like:


Figure 5.3: Diagram of the Lift Valve (page 48)


Then refer to it as:


“See Figure 5.3 on page 48.”


Update it manually when pages shift.



Option B: Bookmark + Link (No Page Number)



  1. Insert a Bookmark next to the figure.
  2. Link to it from elsewhere:



“See Diagram of the Lift Valve.”


But the reader has to click—it doesn’t show the page number.



❗No Good Way to Auto-Update Page Numbers



The Docs API doesn’t give reliable page numbers since layout is handled by the front-end renderer (not exposed to script).





✅ Best Practices for a Google Docs Book


Feature

Method

Full TOC

Use built-in TOC with heading styles

Local TOCs

Manual link lists or careful use of TOC insert

“See page X” refs

Manual updates only

Figures/Diagrams

Label clearly, optionally add bookmarks

Navigation

Use internal links liberally (bookmarks, headings)




If you’re planning to export to PDF, all your heading links and TOC should still work—though again, only static page numbers are preserved.


Would you like a template file with all this pre-set? I can guide you through building one or make a sample.