If you are unsure of the key positions you can use the on-screen keyboard
(all programs Accessories Accessibility) as a reminder - or you could
simply add a cheap Greek keyboard, should you need to use it a lot.
--
Graham Mayor - Word MVP
My web site
www.gmayor.com
Word MVP web site
http://word.mvps.org
grammatim wrote:
On May 27, 3:31 pm, StevenM stevencraigmiller(at)comcast(dot)net
wrote:
To: Grammatim,
Did you get access to the additional keyboards? Does the one
labeled "Classical" give you all the accents?
I got it switched over to the Greek Polytonic (I guess I wasn't as
careful the first time as I should have been).
I'll use it and see what I think. At least one Website suggested
that using the Tavultesoft Keyman keyboard was easier. But I think
it will simply be a matter of getting used to it.
The fewer added-in bells and whistles, the better, probably. I'll put
it back the next time I need to type Ethiopic. (My introduction to
these newsgroups was when I asked in the PowerPoint one why my
Ethiopic examples didn't show up when my presentation was shown via CD
using a different computer -- even though it claimed to have Embedded
All Fonts, it turned out it hadn't. If I'd stayed in Tahoma instead of
using a nicer-looking one -- the one that came with TavulteSoft --, I
probaby would have been ok. The answer turned out to be some arcane
method Windows uses for accessing or replacing fonts whose names it
doesn't recognize )