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This is completely baffling -- maybe your TNR (etc.) came in with
Windows XP, and Office2007 didn't update it, so maybe you can get from the MS website (somehow!) the font updates that come with Vista?? (Or when you rush out to buy Windows 7, you'll get newer fonts?) On Nov 18, 2:11*pm, Pamela Case wrote: I have tried each of the fonts you listed, and don't find the symbol under insert symbol in any of them and when I use the ALT-X method, just get the empty box. *The 035D is available in some of those fonts, but not 035C. * "Peter T. Daniels" wrote: (I said _probably_ Cambria Math because it has not quite the full number of characters in the range, and the display in BabelMap isn't all that clear, especially for these characters that tend to pile up on each other!) The tie ligature is definitely in the others that I named. On Nov 16, 10:34 am, "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote: Now this is interesting. I'm using Windows XP and Word 2003/2007 (including the fonts installed with Word 2007). I do NOT see 035C in Cambria Math (though it includes 035D). I would not expect to see it in any of the other fonts, which are all older. Presumably when I get a Windows 7 laptop, I'll have the versions you have. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USAhttp://word.mvps.org "Peter T. Daniels" wrote in ... How old is your system? There are some Unicode ranges that aren't covered by Windows XP, and there may be old versions of those fonts that don't include the character. Checking with BabelMap.exe, I find that the two "Unicode" fonts _don't_ have all the Combining Diacritical Marks characters -- but that the following fonts that you do have (they came with either Windows or Office or both) do: Arial, Courier New, Microsoft Sans Serif, Times New Roman, Tahoma, and probably Cambria Math. But when the font in Insert Symbol is set to the first item ("normal font" or something like that), it should show all the characters, unless it was recently used set to some specific font. But when you type the Unicode Alt-X for a character not in the font you happen to be using, Word ought to substitute its default for the particular missing character. On Nov 16, 8:44 am, Pamela Case wrote: Thanks for your patient responding. When I scroll through the combining diacritical marks section in either Arial Unicode MS or Lucida Sans Unicode, I do not see the symbol and do not see the 035c code come up. When I type a035cALT-xi using the regular key pad, I get just an empty box--neither the a nor the i appears. "Peter T. Daniels" wrote: On Nov 15, 5:10 pm, Pamela Case wrote: The unicode character is 035C. I am using Word 2007 with Windows XP.. When I type the character between the two letters, select it, and key in ALT x, I get the box that indicates a missing symbol. I can't find the symbol in the Arial Unicode MS set under IPA extensions, yet it is an IPA symbol and it does have a unicode character. Is there any way to make this work?\ It's not under "IPA extensions," it's under "Combining diacritical marks" (you can tell from its code number -- when you select a character in Insert Symbol, it shows you its number; just keep scrolling till you come to it). (If this appears twice, forgive me. I am new to this discussion and am having some difficulty posting.) See extended discussion of your previous posting. Don't "select" the Unicode code, just type the four digits (on the regular keyboard) and press Alt-X.- |
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