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I do see KGlennC's point... Being able to write all fractions in a
consistent format with minimal manual work would probably benefit a lot more users than something like easy-to-use drop caps. The improvement over Greg's macro that MS could add is to recognize a fraction automatically in text and trigger AutoFormat, instead of having to enter the fraction in a special box. In fact, if it were available I'd consider that to be one of the few AutoFormat As You Type options that I wouldn't turn off. ;-) -- Regards, Jay Freedman Microsoft Word MVP FAQ: http://word.mvps.org On Fri, 25 Feb 2005 18:41:42 -0600, "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote: I don't think you can blame Microsoft for the Unicode standard. Word makes available as made-up fractions those that are available in common fonts. -- 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. "KGlennC" wrote in message ... Neither option is that realistic. But, I did find a solution elsewhere in this Discussion Group that APPEARS to work and is very easy to use once you've developed the Macro and added it to the Toolbar. See http://gregmaxey.mvps.org/Insert_For..._Fractions.htm If I can do it (after finding where someone else did it), then Microsoft could add the same capability/function to its products very, very easily, thereby ensuring document compatability for all users. Not sure why Microsoft forces a user to jump through hoops using EE or adding a zillion AutoCorrect entries. Apparently, Microsoft doesn't think engineering-related enties are that important, only cooks and their recipes. /rant "Bob Mathews" wrote: On 25-Feb-2005, wrote: I own an engineering related company and our documents look unprofessional in that if not all fractions can be displayed in the basic fraction format, then I use the "full- size" format (e.g., 3/16). One of Microsoft's suggestions discusses recipes; another recommends using Equation Editor (very, very time consuming, cumersome and does not return characters consistent with document font). Glenn, Equation Editor (EE) returns characters in whatever font you set it up for. With EE active, the menus on Word's menu bar aren't Word menus any more; they're EE menus. With EE open, select Style Define, and set up the fonts to match your document fonts. Keep in mind that these styles must be set to Symbol font: Symbol, LC Greek, & UC Greek. Similarly, select Size Define, and set the Full size to match your document's font size. Set the rest of the sizes in percent values. I recommend these values: 58%, 45%, 150%, and 100%, respectively, from top to bottom after full-size. Be sure to include the % symbol. Setting these values to percent values allows you to change your font size by changing only the Full size value. You can also program as many fractions as you want into Word's AutoCorrect feature. Obviously there is an infinite number of fractions, and you can't include them all in AC, but I'm sure there are many that you use most often. On our web site, we have a tutorial on doing this: http://www.dessci.com/en/support/tut...t/tutorial.htm. This tutorial specifically discusses MathType, the professional version of EE, but much of what the tutorial discusses can be done with EE. -- Bob Mathews Director of Training 830-990-9699 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 |
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