▄▄▄▄███▄▄▄▄    ▄█  ▄██   ▄   ███    █▄     ▄█   ▄█▄  ▄█
▄██▀▀▀███▀▀▀██▄ ███  ███   ██▄ ███    ███   ███ ▄███▀ ███
███   ███   ███ ███▌ ███▄▄▄███ ███    ███   ███▐██▀   ███▌
███   ███   ███ ███▌ ▀▀▀▀▀▀███ ███    ███  ▄█████▀    ███▌
███   ███   ███ ███▌ ▄██   ███ ███    ███ ▀▀█████▄    ███▌
███   ███   ███ ███  ███   ███ ███    ███   ███▐██▄   ███
███   ███   ███ ███  ███   ███ ███    ███   ███ ▀███▄ ███
 ▀█   ███   █▀  █▀    ▀█████▀  ████████▀    ███   ▀█▀ █▀
                                            ▀             
~/system/features.md
$ ./Miyuki --info

# Core Features

  • Image Input Drag files or paste URLs. Engine converts pixels to characters using brightness mapping algorithms.
  • Real-time Render Character spacing and font adjustments update instantly. No waiting, no guessing.
  • Multi-format Export Raw text, PNG, or encoded variants. Terminal paste-ready or embed anywhere.
  • Density Control Fine-tune character spacing and symbol sets. Dense detail or clean minimalism.
  • Edge Preservation Maintains sharp lines and text legibility. Complex images stay readable at any resolution.
  • Direct Output Copy-paste ready for terminals, code blocks, or plain text. No formatting hassles.
  • Responsive Interface Works on desktop and mobile. Clean UI that stays out of your way.
  • Keyboard Shortcuts Rapid workflow with hotkeys. Convert, copy, export without touching the mouse.
~/system/about.md
$ ./Miyuki --help

# About Miyuki

Miyuki is a tiny agent of chaos for the terminal age: drop a photo or type a prompt, get crisp text art, and—if you want—wrap it in Base64/Hex/ROT47 so friends have to hit Decode to see the punchline. It's fast, playful, and proudly text-first.

Born from the idea that plain text travels everywhere, Miyuki maps brightness and edges to character density, lays it out on a monospace grid, and lets you tune width, contrast, charset, color/mono, invert, and background. Export as PNG/TXT or copy to clipboard—ready for profiles, READMEs, terminals, flyers, and inside jokes.

Why the encoding? Because secrets are fun. Encoded ASCII survives chats and code blocks without breaking, doubles as a mini-puzzle, and looks great in dark or light modes. No token talk, no roadmap theatre—just quick creation with agent vibes and a hint of glitch.