Pancake Posted March 3, 2009 Posted March 3, 2009 You know, as in, rose wine, with the dash above the e? I couldn't find a straight-forward answer when i ran it though a search engine. And i'm using Windows btw.
Tellyn Posted March 3, 2009 Posted March 3, 2009 Alt+e for é. On my laptop it's Alt Gr + e, but I can't remember if you get that on other keyboards...
Shorty Posted March 3, 2009 Posted March 3, 2009 Yeah, Alt Gr and a letter works for me, always has: áéÃóú. As a last resort you can copy characters from the character map.
Dyson Posted March 3, 2009 Posted March 3, 2009 (edited) What IS Alt Gr anyway? I have it but what does it meeeean?! Edited March 18, 2009 by Dyson
Triple_C Posted March 3, 2009 Posted March 3, 2009 It satnds for Alternate Graphic, but I like to think of it as 'Alt, Grrrrrrrr!'
MoogleViper Posted March 3, 2009 Posted March 3, 2009 I like to think of it as a meeting between a soldier and a dog. "HALT!" "Grrrrrr"
RoadKill Posted March 11, 2009 Posted March 11, 2009 Yeah, Alt Gr and a letter works for me, always has: áéÃóú. As a last resort you can copy characters from the character map. By character map, to clarify, he means the application called Character Map, under Start>Programs>Accessories>System Tools
MoogleViper Posted March 11, 2009 Posted March 11, 2009 how do umlauts work then? How do they work? Do you mean when are they used or how do you type them?
dwarf Posted March 11, 2009 Posted March 11, 2009 Wow I have never noticed the alt gr key until now! Great little key, should have greeted me earlier though.
Dan_Dare Posted March 11, 2009 Posted March 11, 2009 How do they work? Do you mean when are they used or how do you type them? how you type them. alt gr = ó, see...so where's the umlaut!? WHERE, DAMMIT!?
Molly Posted March 11, 2009 Posted March 11, 2009 I like to think of it as a meeting between a soldier and a dog. "HALT!" "Grrrrrr" lol, whenever I say 'Alt Gr', which admittedly isn't very often, I say it as Grrrrrrr. It feels right.
Shorty Posted March 14, 2009 Posted March 14, 2009 how you type them. alt gr = ó, see...so where's the umlaut!? WHERE, DAMMIT!?ALT 0223 = ß ALT 0228 = ä ALT 0246 = ö ALT 0252 = ü ALT 0196 = Ä ALT 0214 = Ö ALT 0220 = Ü
Blue_Ninja0 Posted March 14, 2009 Posted March 14, 2009 Envy my portuguese keyboard! MWHAHAH! We've got á à ã â ç, a button press away.
RoadKill Posted March 16, 2009 Posted March 16, 2009 ÃŒ dön't èñvy ŝhït (I have my own custom layout that allows me to do this shit)
Nolan Posted March 16, 2009 Posted March 16, 2009 Blasted american style keyboards....I can't do any of that. I have no Gr key, and Alt just goes to the toolbar.
Kirkatronics Posted March 16, 2009 Posted March 16, 2009 Blasted american style keyboards....I can't do any of that. I have no Gr key, and Alt just goes to the toolbar. You hold it, not press it. Like alt + f4 works, kinda. Hold ALT and press the numbers to make things.
Nolan Posted March 16, 2009 Posted March 16, 2009 You hold it, not press it.Like alt + f4 works, kinda. Hold ALT and press the numbers to make things. I was holding it, it does nothing.
The fish Posted March 16, 2009 Posted March 16, 2009 I was holding it, it does nothing. That's what you get for being born on the wrong side of the Atlantic... :wink: You can get a rather handy keyboard layout editor from Microsoft's website, if you want to do all this crazy shit.
Supergrunch Posted March 16, 2009 Posted March 16, 2009 (edited) What I'd really like is decent input systems for Korean and Russian (as opposed to just keyboard maps), and also some facilty for adding diacritics to letters like V, which even Charis SIL doesn't seem to manage that well. Damn missionaries... :wink: Edited March 16, 2009 by Supergrunch
Mr. Anonymous Posted March 17, 2009 Posted March 17, 2009 (edited) For Pc hold Alt then use the number pad to the right to enter the numbers, for laptop use the FN key a put num lk on, then hold alt and enter the numbers. I think this is all of them. Or when in MS word go up to "insert" from the drop down menu, pick Special Characte, change it from symbols to the font you are using, then select the letter you need Alt Plus number = 0138Š 0140Œ 0142Ž 0154š 0156œ 0158ž 0159Ÿ 0192À 0193à 0194 0195à 0196Ä 0197Ã… 0198Æ 0199Ç 0200È 0201É 0202Ê 0203Ë 0204ÃŒ 0205à 0206ÃŽ 0207à 0208à 0209Ñ 0210Ã’ 0211Ó 0212Ô 0213Õ 0214Ö 0215× 0216Ø 0217Ù 0218Ú 0219Û 0220Ãœ 0221à 0222Þ 0223ß 0224à 0225á 0226â 0227ã 0228ä 0229Ã¥ 0230æ 0231ç 0232è 0233é 0234ê 0235ë 0236ì 0237à 0238î 0239ï 0240ð 0241ñ 0242ò 0243ó 0244ô 0245õ 0246ö 0247÷ 0248ø 0249ù 0250ú 0251û 0252ü 0253ý 0254þ 0255ÿ or just copy and paste the letter from here. Enjoy hope this helps you guys out. Mr. A Edited March 29, 2009 by Mr. Anonymous
pastmaster Posted March 27, 2009 Posted March 27, 2009 If you have WORD, click on INSERT, SYMBOL. Highlight the letter you want (you may need to change fonts to find the letter, as not all fonts have all characters) and you will see the ASCII symbol in a small display box. Note this for future use. You can either insert your symbol into a WORD .doc, then copy it to somewhere else, or you can use the ALT key to type the code on your numeric keypad - eg press and hold ALT key and type 0246 on the NUMERIC pad. This should give you ö! Numbers for umlaut are 0228 0196 0246 0214 0252 0220 (including capitals).
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