You can use a HTML code.
<u>TEXTHERE</u>
use that code, by putting your text you want underlined where it says text here. That is for when you are on the computer, though, like making a web page or editing your profile etc.
Underlined and in blue.
Underlined text is often confused for a hyperlink because web design conventions typically use underlining to indicate clickable links. Users have been conditioned to associate underlined text with interactive content, making it instinctively perceived as a hyperlink. Additionally, in digital formats, the visual cue of underlining signals that the text may lead to additional information or resources, further reinforcing this expectation. This can lead to misunderstandings when underlined text is not actually a link.
strText$ = "Some text to be underlined." CLS PRINT strText$ PRINT STRING$(LEN(strText$), "*")
A link.
To demonstrate various text styles and effects in HTML, you can use the following code snippet: <!DOCTYPE html> <html lang="en"> <head> <meta charset="UTF-8"> <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1.0"> <title>Text Styles</title> <style> .bold { font-weight: bold; } .italic { font-style: italic; } .underline { text-decoration: underline; } .strikethrough { text-decoration: line-through; } .highlight { background-color: yellow; } </style> </head> <body> <p class="bold">This is bold text.</p> <p class="italic">This is italic text.</p> <p class="underline">This is underlined text.</p> <p class="strikethrough">This is strikethrough text.</p> <p class="highlight">This is highlighted text.</p> </body> </html> This code showcases bold, italic, underlined, strikethrough, and highlighted text styles using CSS classes.
To make words bolded, type [b] text you want bolded [/b]. To make words underlined, type [u] text you want underlined[/u]. To make words italicized, type [i] text you want underlined [/i].
<u>YOUR TEXT HERE</u>
you put <u> before the text and then at the end of the text you put </u> then your comment will come out underlined
hyperlink
underlined
When writing the name of a textbook, it is underlined. This is because it is a book.
yes
People may confuse underlined text with hyperlinks because traditionally on the internet, hyperlinks are represented by underlined text. This association has become so ingrained in user behavior that underlined text is often automatically assumed to be clickable. Additionally, the use of underlining to indicate importance or emphasis may further contribute to this confusion.
It seems that there is no underlined text provided in your question for me to reference. If you could provide the specific text or context regarding the text and folder names, I would be happy to help clarify or explain it further!
Since you click the U to get the text to become underlined, to git rid of the underline, highlight the text that was underlined, then click the U button.
Hyperlink
A hyperlink