In the past I have used defs like \def\reg{\char174} Is there a more universal way to get these symbols? -- John Culleton "Create Book Covers with Scribus" Printable E-book 38 pages $5.95 http://www.booklocker.com/books/4055.html
Am 28.01.2010 um 23:59 schrieb Wolfgang Schuster:
Am 28.01.10 23:43, schrieb John Culleton:
In the past I have used defs like \def\reg{\char174} Is there a more universal way to get these symbols?
® and ©
or
\registered and \copyright :)
Wolfgang
is there a source where i can find such definitions? I mean for other symbols and „hard to type“ characters best regards Bernhard
Am 29.01.10 00:36, schrieb Bernhard Rosensteiner:
is there a source where i can find such definitions? I mean for other symbols and „hard to type“ characters For MkII look in the enco-xxx.mkii files, for MkIV you can find all commands in char-def.lua
rover:base wolf$ grep contextname char-def.lua contextname="quotedbl", contextname="textdollar", contextname="percent", contextname="quotesingle", contextname="textslash", contextname="textbackslash", contextname="textasciicircum", contextname="textunderscore", contextname="textgrave", contextname="idotaccent", contextname="textbraceleft", contextname="textbar", ... The values of contextname are available as commands in ConTeXt. Wolfgang
Am 29.01.2010 um 00:46 schrieb Wolfgang Schuster:
Am 29.01.10 00:36, schrieb Bernhard Rosensteiner:
is there a source where i can find such definitions? I mean for other symbols and „hard to type“ characters For MkII look in the enco-xxx.mkii files, for MkIV you can find all commands in char-def.lua
rover:base wolf$ grep contextname char-def.lua contextname="quotedbl", contextname="textdollar", contextname="percent", contextname="quotesingle", contextname="textslash", contextname="textbackslash", contextname="textasciicircum", contextname="textunderscore", contextname="textgrave", contextname="idotaccent", contextname="textbraceleft", contextname="textbar", ...
The values of contextname are available as commands in ConTeXt.
Wolfgang
wow - millions of definitions. Thanks a lot. best regards Bernhard
On Fri, 29 Jan 2010 00:36:13 +0100
Bernhard Rosensteiner
is there a source where i can find such definitions? I mean for other symbols and „hard to type“ characters
best regards Bernhard
for my purpose, I made utf-8 text containing all unusual characters and I copy and paste them. It's the most convenient way, IMO. example: ≈≐∿ №©®™ℎℏ°℃ ⌀ diameter 2300 ∅ empty set 2205 ⍉ 2349 ¼½¾⅓⅔⅕⅖⅗⅘⅙⅚⅛⅜⅝⅞⅟ ₀₁₂₃₄₅₆₇₈₉₊₋₌₍₎ ⁰¹²³⁴⁵⁶⁷⁸⁹⁺⁻⁼⁽⁾ √(x² ˖ y²) √∛∜∢ Regards Zdenek
On Fri, Jan 29, 2010 at 10:03 AM, zs
On Fri, 29 Jan 2010 00:36:13 +0100 Bernhard Rosensteiner
wrote: is there a source where i can find such definitions? I mean for other symbols and „hard to type“ characters
best regards Bernhard
for my purpose, I made utf-8 text containing all unusual characters and I copy and paste them. It's the most convenient way, IMO.
example:
≈≐∿ №©®™ℎℏ°℃ ⌀ diameter 2300 ∅ empty set 2205 ⍉ 2349 ¼½¾⅓⅔⅕⅖⅗⅘⅙⅚⅛⅜⅝⅞⅟ ₀₁₂₃₄₅₆₇₈₉₊₋₌₍₎ ⁰¹²³⁴⁵⁶⁷⁸⁹⁺⁻⁼⁽⁾ √(x² ˖ y²) √∛∜∢ nice idea It would be nice to collect the most used unicode char in a wiki page and also in a txt file to include in minimals just as convenience when typesetting in mkiv -- luigi
On Thursday 28 January 2010 17:59:07 Wolfgang Schuster wrote:
Am 28.01.10 23:43, schrieb John Culleton:
In the past I have used defs like \def\reg{\char174} Is there a more universal way to get these symbols?
® and ©
or
\registered and \copyright :)
Wolfgang
Thnks a bunch. Where did you find the documentation on these two characters? -- John Culleton "Create Book Covers with Scribus" Printable E-book 38 pages $5.95 http://www.booklocker.com/books/4055.html
participants (5)
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Bernhard Rosensteiner
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John Culleton
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luigi scarso
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Wolfgang Schuster
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zs