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To find out what the character is, place the cursor to the right of the
character and press ALT+x. The character should change into a character code. Jot it down. Go to the symbols tab of the symbols dialog, choose the font that the character is in (in the document) or choose Arial Unicode, Cambria Math, or Gentium, and make sure that the box labeled "from:" says Unicode (hex). Type the character code into the so-named box on the lower right. Word should highlight the character and, near the lower left corner of the dialog box, show the character's name. As Peter says, it's probably one to the em-space characters. To change the character code back into a character, press Alt-x again. HTH, PamC Peter Jamieson wrote: Could be em-space characters or en-space characters (see the Insert tab,Symbols-Symbol-More Symbols-Special Characters) I just opened a Word 2003 document someone sent me and some of the spaces are wider than normal. I turned on 'Show All Formatting Marks' and they look like the character for a non-breaking space ( a little circle) but there is a space after them and they don't hold words together. What are they? -- Message posted via OfficeKB.com http://www.officekb.com/Uwe/Forums.a...ement/200807/1 |
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