Mr. Daniels,
Excellent post and very helpful. Perfect delivery. BZ
When I simply type 2234 and press ALT+x (without first selecting a font) the
symbol appears in MS Mincho. My default font is Times New Roman. Is MS
Mincho something new and still suitable with this symbol?
You can insert Unicode symbols programmatically as well. In this case you
can could use:
Sub InsertThereforeSymbol()
Selection.InsertSymbol Font:="Arial Unicode", CharacterNumber:=8756,
Unicode:=True
End Sub
Note the different number (8756). The InsertSymbol method requires a Long
value. Accordingly the unicode hex number 2234 must be converted:
Sub GetLong()
MsgBox ConvertHexToLong(2234)
End Sub
Function ConvertHexToLong(ByVal hex) As Long
ConvertHexToLong = Val("&H" & hex & "&")
End Function
Thanks.
--
Greg Maxey
See my web site
http://gregmaxey.mvps.org
for an eclectic collection of Word Tips.
"Peter T. Daniels" wrote in message
...
Using the Symbol font can lead to problems down the line (its encoding
doesn't match Unicode encoding), so you might do better to use the
character from the "Mathematical Operators" range accessed via Insert
Symbol. The "Therefore" character is at 2234; type that code on the
regular keyboard and then Alt-X. You'll find it in Cambria Math, Arial
Unicode, Lucida Sans, and Lucida Sans Unicode.
On Oct 28, 5:53 pm, Wombling63
wrote:
There is a symbol made up of three dots in the shape of a triangle meaning
"therefore". Where can I find it?
Thanks