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Yeah I've been putting off starting a project for hours. Still ain't recouped from the flu shot completely but that's no excuse. Wanted to process a few pictures I took yesterday but can't get into that either.
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Quote: Very bored today As the CEO of Wales, that seems odd.
There are only 10 types of people in the world, those who understand binary and those who don't.
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One of my favorite characters, the cats just got cool.
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Ooookaaay... so now I've downloaded an image of the Pink Panther and added the text; where shall I post it? (I already posted it on FaceBook.)
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Keep Clam And Proofread
--
√(-1) 23 ∑ π...
And it was delicious.
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He has no defense. Everyone knows it's the man's job to open the ketchup as it's always too tight.
speramus in juniperus
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This ketchup stuff is serious business! I feel it man!
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I've been trying (on and off) for a couple of weeks to head an Excel column with xbar (an 'x' with an overline) instead of the text "Ave", simply because it is prettier. Can I do it? no. Can I find a way that works on t'interweb? No. Then this morning I looked again, and I found a solution in just 7 words: "Do it in Word and copy it"
Gah! Why the heck didn't I think of that? Open Word, type "sdf" and space to stop it uppercasing for me, then "x" followed by ALT-0772. Highlight, copy, Excel, paste. Swear. It works...
Don't you loooove consistency between applications?
The only instant messaging I do involves my middle finger.
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Consistency between applications? I don't think I've heard of that.
But wait, this is actually weird. I thought alt codes were a feature of windows, not of word. ALT-30 works, but typing "x" followed by ALT-0772 doesn't seem to do anything. What's going on?
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Depends on the app (it would seem) and the font. Try it in Word with a Unicode (phonetics aware) font (MS Arial Unicode MS, stock Arial or even just the default Calibri will work fine, but my preferred Verdana doesn't) and it will add the phonetic overbar to the "x" for xbar. Stupid thing doesn't work in Excel though...
The only instant messaging I do involves my middle finger.
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I can't try it, I don't have Word. Still, learned something new today.
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You like Verdana? I like Verdana too. Why? Because that's what CP used for so many years.
Now CP has switched to Segoe UI, but my mind takes time to adapt.
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I dunno why, but I just find Verdana easy on the eye, and slightly quicker to read than Segoe. I used to like Times New Roman, but that was noticeably slower to read at the same font size - I think it was the serifs that did it, they "clutter" the character. Strangely I don't like Arial at all!
The only instant messaging I do involves my middle finger.
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harold aptroot wrote: but typing "x" followed by ALT-0772 doesn't seem to do anything. What's going on?
Doesn't work for me either. But searched for it and found that it works only with the numeric keypad
Here is the link[^]
don't worry and don't get frustrated. everything will eventually sort out and then we will regret being frustrated. the only thing that matters is conscious efforts to make things right. - Rahul Rajat Singh
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That's what I did. It doesn't work anyway.
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Sorry - but ALT codes only ever work with the numeric pad - I forgot people might not know that if they don't use them (I use it for accents when I type Welsh for example)
The only instant messaging I do involves my middle finger.
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We can’t stop here, this is bat country - Hunter S Thompson RIP
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Ribbon: Insert -> Symbol, then enter 0304 (COMBINING MACRON) in the character code box.
Essentially it is Excel's internal CharMap equivalent. For that matter, CharMap also works.
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I told you I was thick...
The only instant messaging I do involves my middle finger.
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Whatdya mean sometimes?
speramus in juniperus
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Hi OG,
I'd say your keen mind, at maximum "thick," measures under 100 nanometers (that would be 1000 Angstroms)
The "append horizontal bar super-scripted over the preceding character ... maybe" action, triggered by entering Alt-0772 is really an "edge case."
Some fonts, like Verdana, just don't support the higher Unicode functions, like this one. Others, that are not, in Windows, labeled "Unicode," like Arial, Segoe, etc., do.
I've observed that depending on the application, and its current font setting, having the numeric keypad activated (Num-Lock "on") may, or may not, be required to enter the super-scripted bar. In WordPad, the Num-Lock setting doesn't matter: it just works.
My daily work-horse text-editor will not support this no matter what language code-page, and font, I have selected as the default for the current edit windows: yet, it does support Unicode.
You may have noticed that in your browser (I'm using Chrome), trying to enter Alt-0772 when Num-Lock is "off" will attempt a page navigation (in Chrome it will trigger going to the home-page), and, when Num-Lock is "on," it's a no-op.
If you don't feel like firing up MS Word, you can use WordPad to easily get x-bar super-scripted characters. I am very surprised to hear you can't enter them into Excel !
bill
Google CEO, Erich Schmidt: "I keep asking for a product called Serendipity. This product would have access to everything ever written or recorded, know everything the user ever worked on and saved to his or her personal hard drive, and know a whole lot about the user's tastes, friends and predilections." 2004, USA Today interview
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