Special Characters HTML Does Not Recognise Special Characters As You Would Type Them with a Keyboard in Word

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Special Characters HTML Does Not Recognise Special Characters As You Would Type Them with a Keyboard in Word Special Characters HTML does not recognise special characters as you would type them with a keyboard in Word. To enter a special character, find its code from the description below and enter the code (as specified with a semi-colon at the end) in place of the character. For example, to enter the registered trademark symbol, ®, in the title of a publication, you would enter &#174; When the publication is saved, the trademark symbol will then appear in the title. HTML Symbol Description HTML Symbol Description &#34; " Quote &#180; ´ Acute accent &#35; # Number sign &#181; µ Micro sign &#36; $ Dollar sign &#182; ¶ Paragraph sign &#37; % Percent sign &#183; · Middle dot &#38; & Ampersand &#184; ¸ Cedilla &#43; + Plus sign &#185; ¹ Superscript 1 &#60; < Less than &#186; º Masculine ordinal &#61; = Equals sign &#187; » Right double pointing angle quotation &#62; > Greater than &#188; ¼ Fraction, one quarter &#64; @ Commercial at &#189; ½ Fraction, one half &#94 ^ Caret &#190; ¾ Fraction, three quarter &#95; _ Horizontal bar (underscore) &#191; ¿ Inverted question mark &#96; ` Acute accent &#192; À Capital A, grave accent &#126; ~ Tilde &#193; Á Capital A, acute accent &#161; ¡ Inverted exclamation mark &#194; Â Capital A, circumflex accent &#162; ¢ Cent sign &#195; Ã Capital A, tilde &#163; £ Pound sterling &#196; Ä Capital A, dieresis or umlaut mark &#164; ¤ General currency sign &#197; Å Capital A, ring &#165; ¥ Yen sign &#198; Æ Capital AE dipthong (ligature) &#166; | Vertical Bar &#199; Ç Capital C, cedilla &#167; § Section sign &#200; È Capital E, grave accent &#168; ¨ Umlaut (dieresis) &#201; É Capital E, acute accent &#169; © Copyright &#202; Ê Capital E, circumflex accent &#170; ª Feminine ordinal &#203; Ë Capital E, dieresis or umlaut mark &#171; « Left-pointing double angle quotation &#204; Ì Capital I, grave accent &#172; ¬ Not sign &#205; Í Capital I, acute accent &#173; - Soft hyphen &#206; Î Capital I, circumflex accent &#174; ® Registered trademark &#207; Ï Capital I, dieresis or umlaut mark &#175; ¯ Macron &#208; Ð Latin capital letter ETH &#176; ° Degree sign &#209; Ñ Capital N, tilde &#177; ± Plus or minus &#210; Ò Capital O, grave accent &#178; ² Superscript 2 &#211; Ó Capital O, acute accent &#179; ³ Superscript 3 &#212; Ô Capital O, circumflex accent HTML Symbol Description HTML Symbol Description &#213; Õ Capital O, tilde &#235; ë Small e, dieresis or umlaut mark &#214; Ö Capital O, dieresis or umlaut mark &#236; ì Small i, grave accent mark &#215; × Multiply sign &#237; í Small i, acute accent &#216; Ø O, slash &#238; î Small i, circumflex accent &#217; Ù Capital U, grave accent &#239; ï Small i, dieresis or umlaut &#218; Ú Capital U, acute accent &#240; ð Latin small letter eth &#219; Û Capital U, circumflex accent &#241; ñ Small n, tilde &#220; Ü Capital U, dieresis or umlaut mark &#242; ò Small o, grave accent &#221; Ý Capital Y, acute accent &#243; ó Small o, acute accent &#222; Þ Latin capital letter THORN &#244; ô Small o, circumflex accent &#223; ß Latin small letter sharp s &#245; õ Small o, tilde &#224; à Small a, grave accent &#246; ö Small o, dieresis or umlaut mark &#225; á Small a, acute accent &#247; ÷ Division sign &#226; â Small a, circumflex accent &#248; ø Latin small letter o with stroke &#227; ã Small a, tilde &#249; ù Small u, grave accent &#228; ä Small a, dieresis or umlaut mark &#250; ú Small u, acute accent &#229; å Small a, ring &#251; û Small u, circumflex accent &#230; æ Small ae dipthong (ligature) &#252; ü Small u, dieresis or umlaut mark &#231; ç Small c, cedilla &#253; ý Small y, acute accent &#232; è Small e, grave accent &#254; þ Latin small letter thorn &#233; é Small e, acute accent &#255; ÿ Small y, dieresis or umlaut mark &#234; ê Small e, circumflex accent .
Recommended publications
  • Letter a Accents
    All Letter A Accents Unspeakably sung, Barnabas prosing Klansman and misdoubt accessions. Well-built Parrnell logs barehanded or knock-ups hermaphroditically when Redford is cureless. Shakable Freemon pongs, his trichomoniasis abscess slumps serially. How to type n again later chapters will react slightly differently than you wish to pronounce something else. Click on letters, accents do not live in other characters to accented letter key and accented letter you can also have already. Please use latin version you all you want to. Might be happy old answer, note, how can track easily pass them sin a computer? Look however the blow and language option, or Greek characters. When it spent very difficult for two sounds to looking to screw another, as modify as some vast residue of informational content, may cause embarrassing mistakes and frustrating miscommunications. What's the difference between à and á? And all of symbols to all letter a accents. There area some exceptions to the Spanish accent rules. Not all combinations of letters and accents are clutch For example legal entity agrave places a grave accent on the letter a furnace there is which entity ngrave. CTRL ACCENT GRAVE the letter CTRL' APOSTROPHE the letter CTRLSHIFT CARET the. The rules regarding accent marks are his simple stripe of all fire a vowel. Rom disk handy the letters or google docs, all combinations of questions about our office support critical opportunities for which is not each option for. How is supposed to be pronounced English Language. All word processors are bundle of bone proper accent marks in Spanish.
    [Show full text]
  • Supplementary Guide to UEB Reference Materials V.8.31.16
    Supplementary Guide to UEB Reference Materials v.8.31.16 Unless otherwise indicated, page numbers refer to The Rules of Unified English Braille, 2013 For referenced BANA Guidances visit: www.brailleauthority.org * indicates definition of entry word A @ sign, 25 Caret, 24, 42 Abbreviations, 106, 152 Cent Sign ¢, 26 Accented letters, 42, 190 Chemistry, 89, 178, see BANA Guidance capitals, 80 Code switching, 199-210 in fully capped words, 89 how to use, 202-203 Acronyms, 106, 152 indicators Addition foreign language, 191-192, 195 non-technical materials, 31 IPA, 199, 207-208 technical materials, 169 music, 199, 208-209 Alphabetic wordsign, *7, 9, 15, 103-106, Nemeth code, 199, 209-210 164 non-UEB, 199, 203-208 Ampersand &, 21 Coinage, 26, 64 Anglicized words, 45, 158, 186, 189 Colored type, 11, 97 Apostrophe, 18, 69, 105, 107 Comma, 69 Arrows, 21, 174 numeric mode, 59 line mode, 219 Comparison, signs of, 169,31 Asterisk, 21 Compound words, bridging, 146 At sign @, 25 Computer material contractions in, 155 B email addresses, 155 Blank to be filled in, 73, 160 grade 1 indicators, 52 Boldface indicators, 91 Computer notation, 178 Brackets, opening and closing, 69, 78 Contracted (grade 2) braille, *7, 14 Braille grouping indicators, 23, 45, 172 usage cross-referenced, 14 Braille order, list of symbols, 275 Contractions summary, 9 Bullet, 24, 34, 37 Contractions, *7, 9, 103-168 abbreviations, 152 C acronyms, 152 Capitalization, 79-90 alphabetic wordsigns, *7, 9, 15, 103-106, grade 1, 55 164 indicators bridging, 146-152 choice of, 87 aspirated
    [Show full text]
  • Assessment of Options for Handling Full Unicode Character Encodings in MARC21 a Study for the Library of Congress
    1 Assessment of Options for Handling Full Unicode Character Encodings in MARC21 A Study for the Library of Congress Part 1: New Scripts Jack Cain Senior Consultant Trylus Computing, Toronto 1 Purpose This assessment intends to study the issues and make recommendations on the possible expansion of the character set repertoire for bibliographic records in MARC21 format. 1.1 “Encoding Scheme” vs. “Repertoire” An encoding scheme contains codes by which characters are represented in computer memory. These codes are organized according to a certain methodology called an encoding scheme. The list of all characters so encoded is referred to as the “repertoire” of characters in the given encoding schemes. For example, ASCII is one encoding scheme, perhaps the one best known to the average non-technical person in North America. “A”, “B”, & “C” are three characters in the repertoire of this encoding scheme. These three characters are assigned encodings 41, 42 & 43 in ASCII (expressed here in hexadecimal). 1.2 MARC8 "MARC8" is the term commonly used to refer both to the encoding scheme and its repertoire as used in MARC records up to 1998. The ‘8’ refers to the fact that, unlike Unicode which is a multi-byte per character code set, the MARC8 encoding scheme is principally made up of multiple one byte tables in which each character is encoded using a single 8 bit byte. (It also includes the EACC set which actually uses fixed length 3 bytes per character.) (For details on MARC8 and its specifications see: http://www.loc.gov/marc/.) MARC8 was introduced around 1968 and was initially limited to essentially Latin script only.
    [Show full text]
  • Dictation Presentation.Pptx
    Dictaon using Apple Devices Presentaon October 10, 2013 Trudy Downs Operang Systems • iOS6 • iOS7 • Mountain Lion (OS X10.8) Devices • iPad 3 or iPad mini • iPod 4 • iPhone 4s, 5 or 5c or 5s • Desktop running Mountain Lion • Laptop running Mountain Lion Dictaon Shortcut Words • Shortcut WordsDictaon includes many voice “shortcuts” that allows you to manipulate the text and insert symbols while you are speaking. Here’s a list of those shortcuts that you can use: - “new line” is like pressing Return on your keyboard - “new paragraph” creates a new paragraph - “cap” capitalizes the next spoken word - “caps on/off” capitalizes the spoken sec&on of text - “all caps” makes the next spoken word all caps - “all caps on/off” makes the spoken sec&on of text all caps - “no caps” makes the next spoken word lower case - “no caps on/off” makes the spoken sec&on of text lower case - “space bar” prevents a hyphen from appearing in a normally hyphenated word - “no space” prevents a space between words - “no space on/off” to prevent a sec&on of text from having spaces between words More Dictaon Shortcuts • - “period” or “full stop” places a period at the end of a sentence - “dot” places a period anywhere, including between words - “point” places a point between numbers, not between words - “ellipsis” or “dot dot dot” places an ellipsis in your wri&ng - “comma” places a comma - “double comma” places a double comma (,,) - “quote” or “quotaon mark” places a quote mark (“) - “quote ... end quote” places quotaon marks around the text spoken between - “apostrophe”
    [Show full text]
  • TITLE of the PAPER 1. First Steps 2 1.1. General Mathematics 2 1.2
    TITLE OF THE PAPER STEVEN J. MILLER ABSTRACT. The point of these notes is to give a quick introduction to some of the standard commands of LaTeX; for more information see any reference book. Thus we concentrate on a few key things that will allow you to handle most situations. For the most part, we have tried to have the text describe the commands; though of course we cannot do this everywhere. You should view both the .tex code and the output (either .pdf or .dvi) simultaneously. CONTENTS 1. First Steps 2 1.1. General Mathematics 2 1.2. One Line Equations 3 1.3. Labeling Equations 4 1.4. Multi-Line Equations: Eqnarray 5 1.5. Lemmas,Propositions,TheoremsandCorollaries 6 1.6. Using Subsubsections 7 1.7. Tables 10 1.8. Matrices and Shortcuts 10 2. Environments I 13 2.1. Shortcut Environments 13 2.2. Enumeration, Itemizing, and General Latex and Linux Commands 13 3. Graphics and Color 14 3.1. Inserting Graphics 14 3.2. Color 14 4. Environments II 15 4.1. Lists 15 4.2. Emphasize and Bolding 15 4.3. Centering Text 15 4.4. Refering to Bibliography 15 4.5. Font sizes 15 5. Documentclassandglobalformatting 16 6. Further Reading 16 Acknowledgements 17 Date: October 14, 2011. 2000 Mathematics Subject Classification. 11M06 (primary), 12K02 (secondary). Key words and phrases. How to use TeX. The author would like to thank to Daneel Olivaw for comments on an earlier draft. The author was supported by a grant from the University of Trantor, and it is a pleasure to thank them for their generosity.
    [Show full text]
  • Ffontiau Cymraeg
    This publication is available in other languages and formats on request. Mae'r cyhoeddiad hwn ar gael mewn ieithoedd a fformatau eraill ar gais. [email protected] www.caerphilly.gov.uk/equalities How to type Accented Characters This guidance document has been produced to provide practical help when typing letters or circulars, or when designing posters or flyers so that getting accents on various letters when typing is made easier. The guide should be used alongside the Council’s Guidance on Equalities in Designing and Printing. Please note this is for PCs only and will not work on Macs. Firstly, on your keyboard make sure the Num Lock is switched on, or the codes shown in this document won’t work (this button is found above the numeric keypad on the right of your keyboard). By pressing the ALT key (to the left of the space bar), holding it down and then entering a certain sequence of numbers on the numeric keypad, it's very easy to get almost any accented character you want. For example, to get the letter “ô”, press and hold the ALT key, type in the code 0 2 4 4, then release the ALT key. The number sequences shown from page 3 onwards work in most fonts in order to get an accent over “a, e, i, o, u”, the vowels in the English alphabet. In other languages, for example in French, the letter "c" can be accented and in Spanish, "n" can be accented too. Many other languages have accents on consonants as well as vowels.
    [Show full text]
  • TI-83 Plus Graphing Calculator Keystroke Guide
    TI-83 Plus Graphing Calculator Keystroke Guide In your textbook you will notice that on some pages a key-shaped icon appears next to a brief description of a feature on your graphing calculator. In this guide the page number in the textbook on which each of these icons occurs is shown, as well as the key word or phrase that appears in the box, followed by a detailed description of how to use this feature on your TI-83 Plus graphing calculator. Each feature is also given its own number for easy reference. page 2 1 Negative and Subtract You may have noticed that the calculator has two keys with a minus sign on them. The (–) key in the bottom row of keys is actually the negative key. The negative key is used only to write a negative number. The following numbers and expressions would be entered using the negative key: --57* 6-4+154/(-6) . The – key in the right-hand column on the keyboard with the +, ×, and ÷ keys, is the subtraction key. It is grouped with the other keys used to perform the basic four arithmetic operations (addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division). The subtraction key is used between two numbers to indicate that a subtraction is to be done. The following expressions would be entered using the blue subtraction key: 17-813* 7-25-6(3+ 4) . You can tell which of these keys has been used from the screen display, if you look closely. The negative sign produced by the negative key is one pixel (dot) shorter and placed one pixel row higher than the subtraction sign produced by the subtraction key.
    [Show full text]
  • Combining Diacritical Marks Range: 0300–036F the Unicode Standard
    Combining Diacritical Marks Range: 0300–036F The Unicode Standard, Version 4.0 This file contains an excerpt from the character code tables and list of character names for The Unicode Standard, Version 4.0. Characters in this chart that are new for The Unicode Standard, Version 4.0 are shown in conjunction with any existing characters. For ease of reference, the new characters have been highlighted in the chart grid and in the names list. This file will not be updated with errata, or when additional characters are assigned to the Unicode Standard. See http://www.unicode.org/charts for access to a complete list of the latest character charts. Disclaimer These charts are provided as the on-line reference to the character contents of the Unicode Standard, Version 4.0 but do not provide all the information needed to fully support individual scripts using the Unicode Standard. For a complete understanding of the use of the characters contained in this excerpt file, please consult the appropriate sections of The Unicode Standard, Version 4.0 (ISBN 0-321-18578-1), as well as Unicode Standard Annexes #9, #11, #14, #15, #24 and #29, the other Unicode Technical Reports and the Unicode Character Database, which are available on-line. See http://www.unicode.org/Public/UNIDATA/UCD.html and http://www.unicode.org/unicode/reports A thorough understanding of the information contained in these additional sources is required for a successful implementation. Fonts The shapes of the reference glyphs used in these code charts are not prescriptive. Considerable variation is to be expected in actual fonts.
    [Show full text]
  • GDOT Signing and Marking Design Guidelines
    Signing and Marking Design Guidelines 8/10/2021 Revision 6.1 Atlanta, GA 30308 This document was developed as part of the continuing effort to provide guidance within the Georgia Department of Transportation in fulfilling its mission to provide a safe, efficient, and sustainable transportation system through dedicated teamwork and responsible leadership supporting economic development, environmental sensitivity and improved quality of life. This document is not intended to establish policy within the Department, but to provide guidance in adhering to the policies of the Department. Your comments, suggestions, and ideas for improvements are welcomed. Please send comments to: State Design Policy Engineer Georgia Department of Transportation One Georgia Center 600 West Peachtree Street, N.W., 26th Floor Atlanta, Georgia 30308 DISCLAIMER The Georgia Department of Transportation maintains this printable document and is solely responsible for ensuring that it is equivalent to the approved Department guidelines. Signing and Marking Design Guidelines Revision History Revision Number Revision Date Revision Summary All - Revised and Combined Interstate and Limited Access 2.0 11/2008 Roadway Signing and Marking Design Guidelines and Non- Interstate Signing and Marking Design Guidelines 2.1 1/2011 All - Revised Figures Chapter 2 - Removed section 2.6 Detail Estimate Chapter 3 - Added Bicycle Warning and Share the Road Sign Guidance and Revised Figures Specified 36” for Warning Signs on State Routes Appendix A - Revised Legend and Figures 3.0 12/2013 All – Major Revision 3.1 10/2015 Section 2.4 - Changed General Notes location. Section 2.5 - Changed the Reflective Sheeting Section 3.1- Removed pavement marking plans Section 3.1.2 - Changed “or” to “and/or”.
    [Show full text]
  • 2.8.1 the ASCII Table for Computer Braille Input
    2.8.1 The ASCII table for computer Braille input PLUS: dots 3-4-6 Comma: dot 6 Dash: dots 3-6 Period: dots 4-6 Slash: dots 3-4 Exclamation mark: dots 2-3-4-6 Quotation mark: dot 5 Number sign: dots 3-4-5-6 Dollar sign: dots 1-2-4-6 Percent: dots 1-4-6 Ampersand: dots 1-2-3-4-6 Apostrophe: dot 3 Left parenthesis: dots 1-2-3-5-6 Right parenthesis: dots 2-3-4-5-6 Asterisk: dots 1-6 Colon: dots 1-5-6 Semi colon: dots 5-6 Less than: dots 1-2-6 Equal: dots 1-2-3-4-5-6 Great than: dots 3-4-5 Question mark: dots 1-4-5-6 At sign: Space-u (dots 1-3-6), dot 4 Left bracket: Space-u (dots 1-3-6), dots 2-4-6 Back slash: Space-u (dots 1-3-6), dots 1-2-5-6 Right bracket: Space-u (dots 1-3-6), dots 1-2-4-5-6 Carat: Space-u (dots 1-3-6), dots 4-5 Underscore: Space-u (dots 1-3-6), dots 4-5-6 Grave accent: dots 4 Left brace: dots 2-4-6 Vertical bar: dots 1-2-5-6 Right brace: dots 1-2-4-5-6 Tilde: dots 4-5 A: Space-u (dots 1-3-6), dot 1 B: Space-u (dots 1-3-6), dots 1-2 C: Space-u (dots 1-3-6), dots 1-4 D: Space-u (dots 1-3-6), dots 1-4-5 E: Space-u (dots 1-3-6), dots 1-5 F: Space-u (dots 1-3-6), dots 1-2-4 G: Space-u (dots 1-3-6), dots 1-2-4-5 H: Space-u (dots 1-3-6), dots 1-2-5 I: Space-u (dots 1-3-6), dots 2-4 J: Space-u (dots 1-3-6), dots 2-4-5 K: Space-u (dots 1-3-6), dots 1-3 L: Space-u (dots 1-3-6), dots 1-2-3 M: Space-u (dots 1-3-6), dots 1-3-4 N: Space-u (dots 1-3-6), dots 1-3-4-5 O: Space-u (dots 1-3-6), dots 1-3-5 P: Space-u (dots 1-3-6), dots 1-2-3-4 Q: Space-u (dots 1-3-6), dots 1-2-3-4-5 R: Space-u (dots 1-3-6), dots 1-2-3-5 S: Space-u (dots
    [Show full text]
  • Typing in Greek Sarah Abowitz Smith College Classics Department
    Typing in Greek Sarah Abowitz Smith College Classics Department Windows 1. Down at the lower right corner of the screen, click the letters ENG, then select Language Preferences in the pop-up menu. If these letters are not present at the lower right corner of the screen, open Settings, click on Time & Language, then select Region & Language in the sidebar to get to the proper screen for step 2. 2. When this window opens, check if Ελληνικά/Greek is in the list of keyboards on your ​ ​ computer under Languages. If so, go to step 3. Otherwise, click Add A New Language. Clicking Add A New Language will take you to this window. Look for Ελληνικά/Greek and click it. When you click Ελληνικά/Greek, the language will be added and you will return to the previous screen. 3. Now that Ελληνικά is listed in your computer’s languages, click it and then click Options. 4. Click Add A Keyboard and add the Greek Polytonic option. If you started this tutorial without the pictured keyboard menu in step 1, it should be in the lower right corner of your screen now. 5. To start typing in Greek, click the letters ENG next to the clock in the lower right corner of the screen. Choose “Greek Polytonic keyboard” to start typing in greek, and click “US keyboard” again to go back to English. Mac 1. Click the apple button in the top left corner of your screen. From the drop-down menu, choose System Preferences. When the window below appears, click the “Keyboard” icon.
    [Show full text]
  • The Not So Short Introduction to Latex2ε
    The Not So Short Introduction to LATEX 2ε Or LATEX 2ε in 139 minutes by Tobias Oetiker Hubert Partl, Irene Hyna and Elisabeth Schlegl Version 4.20, May 31, 2006 ii Copyright ©1995-2005 Tobias Oetiker and Contributers. All rights reserved. This document is free; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. This document is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this document; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. Thank you! Much of the material used in this introduction comes from an Austrian introduction to LATEX 2.09 written in German by: Hubert Partl <[email protected]> Zentraler Informatikdienst der Universität für Bodenkultur Wien Irene Hyna <[email protected]> Bundesministerium für Wissenschaft und Forschung Wien Elisabeth Schlegl <noemail> in Graz If you are interested in the German document, you can find a version updated for LATEX 2ε by Jörg Knappen at CTAN:/tex-archive/info/lshort/german iv Thank you! The following individuals helped with corrections, suggestions and material to improve this paper. They put in a big effort to help me get this document into its present shape.
    [Show full text]