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#1
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Does anyone know how to get the plimsoll symbol in Word, in plain text as
well as in the equation editor? The plimsoll symbol is used in thermodynamic equations, but I can't find it in any of the fonts available. |
#2
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Have you tried Arial Unicode MS or Lucida Sans Unicode?
-- 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. "Tiny" wrote in message ... Does anyone know how to get the plimsoll symbol in Word, in plain text as well as in the equation editor? The plimsoll symbol is used in thermodynamic equations, but I can't find it in any of the fonts available. |
#3
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For starters, I had to look up "plimsoll symbol" because, despite 30 years
of experience in editing science textbooks, I'd never heard of it. It turns out to be an adaptation of a symbol invented by Samuel Plimsoll to show the proper waterline on cargo ships. It's a circle with a horizontal line through it, extending on both sides. Neither Arial Unicode MS nor Lucida Sans Unicode contains exactly that symbol. Arial has one with a vertical line (character 233D) and ones with both diagonals (2300 and 2349), but not a horizontal line. You can make one with an EQ \o field that overlays a circle (Arial Unicode character 25CB) with an em dash. The dash will need to be raised by 1 pt or 1.5 pt, depending on the font size. (See http://sbarnhill.mvps.org/wordfaqs/Overbar.htm for details.) -- Regards, Jay Freedman Microsoft Word MVP FAQ: http://word.mvps.org Suzanne S. Barnhill wrote: Have you tried Arial Unicode MS or Lucida Sans Unicode? "Tiny" wrote in message ... Does anyone know how to get the plimsoll symbol in Word, in plain text as well as in the equation editor? The plimsoll symbol is used in thermodynamic equations, but I can't find it in any of the fonts available. |
#4
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Further to this, the field workaround will work only in regular text. I
don't think there's any way to get it in Equatin Editor unless you can locate a font that has the symbol as a single character. You might try MathType (www.mathtype.com), which comes with a few fonts of its own. The source I found that explained what a plimsoll symbol means in thermodynamics also indicated that a degree symbol is used for the same purpose. That symbol is easily available in both Equation Editor and plain text, so you might consider using it instead. -- Regards, Jay Freedman Microsoft Word MVP FAQ: http://word.mvps.org Jay Freedman wrote: For starters, I had to look up "plimsoll symbol" because, despite 30 years of experience in editing science textbooks, I'd never heard of it. It turns out to be an adaptation of a symbol invented by Samuel Plimsoll to show the proper waterline on cargo ships. It's a circle with a horizontal line through it, extending on both sides. Neither Arial Unicode MS nor Lucida Sans Unicode contains exactly that symbol. Arial has one with a vertical line (character 233D) and ones with both diagonals (2300 and 2349), but not a horizontal line. You can make one with an EQ \o field that overlays a circle (Arial Unicode character 25CB) with an em dash. The dash will need to be raised by 1 pt or 1.5 pt, depending on the font size. (See http://sbarnhill.mvps.org/wordfaqs/Overbar.htm for details.) Suzanne S. Barnhill wrote: Have you tried Arial Unicode MS or Lucida Sans Unicode? "Tiny" wrote in message ... Does anyone know how to get the plimsoll symbol in Word, in plain text as well as in the equation editor? The plimsoll symbol is used in thermodynamic equations, but I can't find it in any of the fonts available. |
#5
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I knew what the symbol was and could have sworn I'd seen it in Arial Unicode
MS. I did find a source giving the Unicode glyph number for it (029B5; ⦵ in SGML). Even if this is interpreted as 29B5, Arial Unicode jumps from 27BE to 3000, so no joy there. Sorry for the bum steer. -- 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. "Jay Freedman" wrote in message ... For starters, I had to look up "plimsoll symbol" because, despite 30 years of experience in editing science textbooks, I'd never heard of it. It turns out to be an adaptation of a symbol invented by Samuel Plimsoll to show the proper waterline on cargo ships. It's a circle with a horizontal line through it, extending on both sides. Neither Arial Unicode MS nor Lucida Sans Unicode contains exactly that symbol. Arial has one with a vertical line (character 233D) and ones with both diagonals (2300 and 2349), but not a horizontal line. You can make one with an EQ \o field that overlays a circle (Arial Unicode character 25CB) with an em dash. The dash will need to be raised by 1 pt or 1.5 pt, depending on the font size. (See http://sbarnhill.mvps.org/wordfaqs/Overbar.htm for details.) -- Regards, Jay Freedman Microsoft Word MVP FAQ: http://word.mvps.org Suzanne S. Barnhill wrote: Have you tried Arial Unicode MS or Lucida Sans Unicode? "Tiny" wrote in message ... Does anyone know how to get the plimsoll symbol in Word, in plain text as well as in the equation editor? The plimsoll symbol is used in thermodynamic equations, but I can't find it in any of the fonts available. |
#6
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On 3-Nov-2005, Tiny wrote:
Does anyone know how to get the plimsoll symbol in Word, in plain text as well as in the equation editor? The plimsoll symbol is used in thermodynamic equations, but I can't find it in any of the fonts available. I'm sure there is more than one font where the symbol exists, but I found it in a font named ESSTIXFive. The ESSTIX fonts were created by Elsevier Science, Netherlands, but I all links I found to them on Google weren't valid. I know the ESSTIX fonts are free, and are included with the Amaya browser. Amaya is available free from the W3C web site at http://www.w3.org/Amaya/User/BinDist.html. As to how to use it in Equation Editor, you can't. However, Jay mentioned MathType, which allows you to access any font on your computer (via the Insert Symbol dialog in the Edit menu). I'd suggest downloading & installing Amaya, which would also install the ESSTIX fonts, and also downloading and installing the evaluation version of MathType (avaliable at the link in my sig). If you choose not to buy MathType during the evaluation period, the feature that allows you to use this font will be disabled after 30 days. -- 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 |
#7
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Posted to microsoft.public.word.docmanagement
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Try using the greek theta θ (03B8) unicode or Alt+X.
"Bob Mathews" wrote: On 3-Nov-2005, Tiny wrote: Does anyone know how to get the plimsoll symbol in Word, in plain text as well as in the equation editor? The plimsoll symbol is used in thermodynamic equations, but I can't find it in any of the fonts available. I'm sure there is more than one font where the symbol exists, but I found it in a font named ESSTIXFive. The ESSTIX fonts were created by Elsevier Science, Netherlands, but I all links I found to them on Google weren't valid. I know the ESSTIX fonts are free, and are included with the Amaya browser. Amaya is available free from the W3C web site at http://www.w3.org/Amaya/User/BinDist.html. As to how to use it in Equation Editor, you can't. However, Jay mentioned MathType, which allows you to access any font on your computer (via the Insert Symbol dialog in the Edit menu). I'd suggest downloading & installing Amaya, which would also install the ESSTIX fonts, and also downloading and installing the evaluation version of MathType (avaliable at the link in my sig). If you choose not to buy MathType during the evaluation period, the feature that allows you to use this font will be disabled after 30 days. -- 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 |
#8
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Try 'o' with a strike-through. This gives the look of the plimsoll symbol.
"Tiny" wrote: Does anyone know how to get the plimsoll symbol in Word, in plain text as well as in the equation editor? The plimsoll symbol is used in thermodynamic equations, but I can't find it in any of the fonts available. |
#9
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Or perhaps an unfilled circular bullet combined with an em dash? See
http://sbarnhill.mvps.org/WordFAQs/C...Characters.htm -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA http://word.mvps.org "TheNewt" wrote in message ... Try 'o' with a strike-through. This gives the look of the plimsoll symbol. "Tiny" wrote: Does anyone know how to get the plimsoll symbol in Word, in plain text as well as in the equation editor? The plimsoll symbol is used in thermodynamic equations, but I can't find it in any of the fonts available. |
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