LL-L "Technica" 2004.12.14 (07) [E]

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Tue Dec 14 17:40:00 UTC 2004


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L O W L A N D S - L * 14.DEC.2004 (07) * ISSN 189-5582 * LCSN 96-4226
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From: Szelog, Mike <Mike.Szelog at citizensbank.com>
Subject: LL-L "Technica" 2004.12.14 (03) [E]

Thanks James!!

Being in banking my math, of course, is utterly horrible - would it be
possible to offer a quick "cheat sheet" method of doing a conversion with
maybe one example so I can see it?

The font I'm trying to use the Unicode characters with is the one Ron
mentioned recently - once you load it to your PC, I believe it's called
"Code 2000" - basically looks like a Times New Roman type font (?).

Thanks!

Mike S
Manchester, NH - USA

James wrote in part:

The ALT+xxxx method still works for Unicode characters, but there are some
gotchas. Firstly, Character Map tells you the Unicode value of a character,
but in hex. You'll have to convert it to decimal first. Then you can do the

ALT thing, providing you're using a font that contains that character. (This
is all for Win xp.)

Finally, although this works in Word, I couldn't get it to work in Outlook
Express. Try typing ALT+0256 in Word and you'll get Capital A with macron.
ALT+1100 will give you the Russian soft sign. And so on.

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