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#1
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tilde over two letters
I am trying to write voltage ac as Vac with one tilde extending over the a
and c. Is there a way to do this in Word so that it stays connected to Vac and moves with Vac when the document is edited? SteveK |
#2
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You may need to create this in Equation Editor.
-- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "SteveK" wrote in message ... I am trying to write voltage ac as Vac with one tilde extending over the a and c. Is there a way to do this in Word so that it stays connected to Vac and moves with Vac when the document is edited? SteveK |
#3
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"SteveK" wrote:
I am trying to write voltage ac as Vac with one tilde extending over the a and c. Is there a way to do this in Word so that it stays connected to Vac and moves with Vac when the document is edited? Can't do it in Equation Editor, but you can in MathType. You can get a 30-day evaluation copy of MathType at the link in my signature. ----- Bob Mathews bobm at dessci.com Director of Training http://www.dessci.com/free.asp?free=news FREE fully-functional 30-day evaluation of MathType 5 Design Science, Inc. -- "How Science Communicates" MathType, WebEQ, MathPlayer, MathFlow, Equation Editor, TeXaide |
#4
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"SteveK" wrote in message ... I am trying to write voltage ac as Vac with one tilde extending over the a and c. Is there a way to do this in Word so that it stays connected to Vac and moves with Vac when the document is edited? SteveK Can I just insert an object that I draw, placing it over the "ac" and place it in a way that it will move with the "ac" text? Steve |
#5
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"SteveK" wrote: =20 "SteveK" wrote in message ... I am trying to write voltage ac as Vac with one tilde extending over = the a and c. Is there a way to do this in Word so that it stays = connected to Vac and moves with Vac when the document is edited? SteveK =20 Can I just insert an object that I draw, placing it over the "ac" and = place it in a way that it will move with the "ac" text? You could try an eq field as described in Suzanne's article: { eq \o \ac (ac;~) } You'd need do fiddle with the position (and maybe font size and/or = scaling) of the ~ in "Format Font" (second tab) to make it look nice. There's also a Unicode character, U+0360 =3D combining double tilde. You can insert it between a and c by typing a, Alt+864, c. But you're limited to large Unicode fonts, and the positioning of such = combining diacritics often is far from perfect. Regards, Klaus |
#6
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Forgot to change the field separator to an "English" comma:
V{ eq \o \ac (ac,~) } and the link to Suzanne's article = http://home.earthlink.net/~wordfaqs/Overbar.htm Klaus |
#7
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Hi Steve,
You can get an 'a' with a tilde over it (i.e. ã) by holding down the Alt key whilst typing 0227 on the numeric keypad. HTH Cheers "SteveK" wrote in message ... I am trying to write voltage ac as Vac with one tilde extending over the a and c. Is there a way to do this in Word so that it stays connected to Vac and moves with Vac when the document is edited? SteveK |
#8
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But he wants the tilde over "ac," not just "a."
-- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "macropod" wrote in message ... Hi Steve, You can get an 'a' with a tilde over it (i.e. ã) by holding down the Alt key whilst typing 0227 on the numeric keypad. HTH Cheers "SteveK" wrote in message ... I am trying to write voltage ac as Vac with one tilde extending over the a and c. Is there a way to do this in Word so that it stays connected to Vac and moves with Vac when the document is edited? SteveK |
#9
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Suzanne S. Barnhill shared this with us in
microsoft.public.word.newusers: But he wants the tilde over "ac," not just "a." Perhaps this is an existing character, in which case Unicode could be used. Lets look it up, shall we? (googles) And indeed, there is an official character for alternating current: Unicode character 223F (sine wave = alternating current). Unfortunately I have not yet found a Windows font that correctly represents this. The closest would be the the tilde (Unicode 007E) If you're lucky, you can read this: U-223F can be entered with Alt+8767 (223F hex = 8767 dec). If you're unlucky, you see a small square. ˆ¿ -- Amedee Van Gasse using XanaNews 1.17.4.1 If it has an "X" in the name, it must be Linux? |
#10
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This character is present in Arial Unicode MS, but I don't see how that
helps with the original problem. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "Amedee Van Gasse" wrote in message ... Suzanne S. Barnhill shared this with us in microsoft.public.word.newusers: But he wants the tilde over "ac," not just "a." Perhaps this is an existing character, in which case Unicode could be used. Lets look it up, shall we? (googles) And indeed, there is an official character for alternating current: Unicode character 223F (sine wave = alternating current). Unfortunately I have not yet found a Windows font that correctly represents this. The closest would be the the tilde (Unicode 007E) If you're lucky, you can read this: U-223F can be entered with Alt+8767 (223F hex = 8767 dec). If you're unlucky, you see a small square. ˆ¿ -- Amedee Van Gasse using XanaNews 1.17.4.1 If it has an "X" in the name, it must be Linux? |
#11
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On Mon, 9 May 2005 16:45:07 +0200, "Amedee Van Gasse"
wrote: If you're lucky, you can read this: U-223F can be entered with Alt+8767 (223F hex = 8767 dec). If you're unlucky, you see a small square. ? I must be middling lucky -- I see a question mark. :-) Stan Brown, Oak Road Systems, Tompkins County, New York, USA http://OakRoadSystems.com/ "I feel a wave of morning sickness coming on, and I want to be standing on your mother's grave when it hits." |
#12
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"I feel a wave of morning sickness coming on, and I want to
be standing on your mother's grave when it hits." Sounds like someone is a "Desperate Housewives" fan? -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "Stan Brown" wrote in message news On Mon, 9 May 2005 16:45:07 +0200, "Amedee Van Gasse" wrote: If you're lucky, you can read this: U-223F can be entered with Alt+8767 (223F hex = 8767 dec). If you're unlucky, you see a small square. ? I must be middling lucky -- I see a question mark. :-) Stan Brown, Oak Road Systems, Tompkins County, New York, USA http://OakRoadSystems.com/ "I feel a wave of morning sickness coming on, and I want to be standing on your mother's grave when it hits." |
#13
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Hi Suzanne,
Yes, I knew that, but I thought the OP might be able to make do with ã. It's also possible to use ADVANCE fields to generate the ~ over the ac, as in: Vac{ADVANCE \l10 \u5}~{ADVANCE \r3 \d5} Cheers "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote in message ... But he wants the tilde over "ac," not just "a." -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "macropod" wrote in message ... Hi Steve, You can get an 'a' with a tilde over it (i.e. ã) by holding down the Alt key whilst typing 0227 on the numeric keypad. HTH Cheers "SteveK" wrote in message ... I am trying to write voltage ac as Vac with one tilde extending over the a and c. Is there a way to do this in Word so that it stays connected to Vac and moves with Vac when the document is edited? SteveK |
#14
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Suzanne S. Barnhill shared this with us in
microsoft.public.word.newusers: "I feel a wave of morning sickness coming on, and I want to be standing on your mother's grave when it hits." Sounds like someone is a "Desperate Housewives" fan? Sounds like someone actually watches this show? -- Amedee Van Gasse using XanaNews 1.17.4.1 If it has an "X" in the name, it must be Linux? |
#15
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At last report, 25.68 million viewers watch it. I am one of them.
-- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "Amedee Van Gasse" wrote in message ... Suzanne S. Barnhill shared this with us in microsoft.public.word.newusers: "I feel a wave of morning sickness coming on, and I want to be standing on your mother's grave when it hits." Sounds like someone is a "Desperate Housewives" fan? Sounds like someone actually watches this show? -- Amedee Van Gasse using XanaNews 1.17.4.1 If it has an "X" in the name, it must be Linux? |
#16
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On Mon, 9 May 2005 10:04:23 -0500, "Suzanne S. Barnhill"
wrote: This character is present in Arial Unicode MS, but I don't see how that helps with the original problem. Where in Arial Unicode MS, Suzanne? I must be going blind(er), but I can't find it in the character map. Is it someplace other than the ANSI charset? Blessed be, for sure... |
#17
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Just where Amedee said it was, at glyph 223F, in the Mathematical Operators
character subset. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "Jim" wrote in message ... On Mon, 9 May 2005 10:04:23 -0500, "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote: This character is present in Arial Unicode MS, but I don't see how that helps with the original problem. Where in Arial Unicode MS, Suzanne? I must be going blind(er), but I can't find it in the character map. Is it someplace other than the ANSI charset? Blessed be, for sure... |
#18
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"Jim" wrote:
Where in Arial Unicode MS, Suzanne? I must be going blind(er), but = I can't find it in the character map. Is it someplace other than the ANSI charset? "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote: Just where Amedee said it was, at glyph 223F, in the=20 Mathematical Operators character subset. Or the combining double tilde, U+0360 (that I think I've mentioned = further up in this thread, too). Klaus |
#19
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Ah, that is a *double* tilde? Hmm, so it is. Kind of ugly on the screen (off
center)--perhaps prints better. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "Klaus Linke" wrote in message ... "Jim" wrote: Where in Arial Unicode MS, Suzanne? I must be going blind(er), but I can't find it in the character map. Is it someplace other than the ANSI charset? "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote: Just where Amedee said it was, at glyph 223F, in the Mathematical Operators character subset. Or the combining double tilde, U+0360 (that I think I've mentioned further up in this thread, too). Klaus |
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