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Alt codes for Maths Symbols

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Stoic Joker:
Don't know if it matters/helps, but (in Word) Alt 247 with Calibri gives me the equivalent symbol here. Notepad with (default) Consolas does as well.

Region/Language/KB layout all set to US.

tomos:
Don't know if it matters/helps, but (in Word) Alt 247 with Calibri gives me the equivalent symbol here. Notepad with (default) Consolas does as well.

Region/Language/KB layout all set to US.
-Stoic Joker (September 29, 2017, 06:47 AM)
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do you mean the correct symbol as shown in OP i.e. ≈
?

I will have a look at language, and keyboard layout

Curt:
How to enter Unicode characters in Microsoft Windows-fileformat.info
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also, https://ufonts.com/download/arial-unicode-ms/197925.html

tomos:
Curt! you're looking different :D

How to enter Unicode characters in Microsoft Windows-fileformat.info
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also, https://ufonts.com/download/arial-unicode-ms/197925.html
-Curt (September 29, 2017, 09:24 AM)
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Curt, you presumably have a european keyboard:
could you try Alt247 (247 from the numberpad) in your word processor & let me know what you get?
Thanks


From your link there I'm using this method - it works for some characters, for others I get unexpected results -- it's not currently important to me why, but I would still like to know why :-[
Method 3: Code-page Specific

    This method depends on the specific code page you have installed.

        Press and hold down the Alt key.
        Type the decimal codepage value on the numeric keypad. Do not type any leading zeros.
        Release the Alt key.

    You can see which code page you have by typing chcp at a command prompt. Check the grid for your code page from the list of known code pages to see what characters you can enter this way.

    The entries in the Unicode character information section are using code page 437.

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I checked the code page & see it is using Code page 850w
850 is the primary code page and default OEM code page in ... e.g. in the United Kingdom, Ireland, and Canada), whilst other English-speaking locales (like the United States) default to use the hardware code page 437.[4]

Systems largely replaced code page 850 with, first, Windows-1252 (often mislabeled as ISO-8859-1), and later with UCS-2, and finally with UTF-16.[nb 1]

Code page 850 differs from code page 437 in that many of the box drawing characters, Greek letters, and various symbols were replaced with additional Latin letters with diacritics, thus greatly improving support for Western European languages (all characters from ISO 8859-1 are included). At the same time, the changes frequently caused display glitches with programs that made use of the box-drawing characters to display a GUI-like surface in text mode.

In 1998, code page 858 was derived from this code page by changing code point 213 (D5hex) from a dotless i ‹i› to the euro sign ‹€›.[5] Despite this, IBM's PC DOS 2000, released in 1998, changed their definition of code page 850 to what they called modified code page 850 now including the euro sign at code point 213 instead of adding support for the new code page 858.[nb 2][6][7][8]
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Stoic Joker:
Don't know if it matters/helps, but (in Word) Alt 247 with Calibri gives me the equivalent symbol here. Notepad with (default) Consolas does as well.

Region/Language/KB layout all set to US.
-Stoic Joker (September 29, 2017, 06:47 AM)
--- End quote ---

do you mean the correct symbol as shown in OP i.e. ≈
?

I will have a look at language, and keyboard layout
-tomos (September 29, 2017, 07:17 AM)
--- End quote ---

Yes.

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