Who Has Which Fonts?
Category: Fonts |
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9600 Read |
Posted: VistaTrick | 12 November 2007
We've now dispensed with how you get at all of the characters that you may have hidden away within your fonts. So we turn to an equally important question: How do you know which fonts you have?
Entering Unicode Characters from the Keyboard
Category: Fonts |
2 Comments |
33678 Read |
Posted: VistaTrick | 12 November 2007
If you frequently write documents in more than one language, you probably already own a keyboard that supports the characters you need. For example, many Canadians use the French-Canadian keyboard and Windows software keyboard layout for it. Both the hard-ware and the software work together to produce the characters commonly used in both English and French, Canada’s two official languages.
Unicode: One Font to Rule Them All
Category: Fonts |
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595 Read |
Posted: VistaTrick | 12 November 2007
Unicode, when fully implemented as explained earlier, will ensure that computer users can reliably exchange documents created on different systems. Unicode support is surprisingly strong, even among zealots of such competing platforms as Windows, Macs, and Linux. This makes it only a matter of time before universal, standardized character positions are used by most applications that support fonts.
How to Spell Words Good
Category: Fonts |
1 Comments |
1496 Read |
Posted: VistaTrick | 10 November 2007
That heading caught your attention, didn't it? For a moment, you weren't sure whether we were joking or just ignorant of proper grammar. We want to make an important point here. Since most English words don't bear accents, many English speakers mistakenly believe it's not important to ever use them.
How to Enter ANSI Characters from the Keyboard
Category: Fonts |
2 Comments |
19672 Read |
Posted: VistaTrick | 10 November 2007
Figure 7-1 shows you all of the characters in the Windows ANSI character set. The characters are numbered 32 through 127 and 0128 through 0255. The numbers above 127, representing characters that don't appear on a U.S. style keyboard, required you in previous versions of Windows to enter a leading zero to access them via the numeric keypad.
(More on this shortly.) The leading zero is no longer necessary if you're using the keypad to enter these characters in Vista.
You Can Never Have Enough Glyphs
Category: Fonts |
0 Comments |
601 Read |
Posted: VistaTrick | 10 November 2007
Before we jump into all of the characters and fonts you have available to you under Windows Vista, we need to be clear on a few definitions:
Windows Has a Lot of Strange Characters
Category: Fonts |
0 Comments |
600 Read |
Posted: VistaTrick | 10 November 2007
Windows Vista gives you The Joy of Fonts. Vista makes it easier than ever to use fonts in your documents and make them look the way you want them to look.
Summary
Category: Using Windows Sidebar |
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415 Read |
Posted: VistaTrick | 10 November 2007
Windows Sidebar is a highly visual and obvious change in Windows Vista. Whether it's something you're going to want to leave running on your PC will depend on your own preferences, of course.
Where Have I Seen This Before?
Category: Using Windows Sidebar |
0 Comments |
421 Read |
Posted: VistaTrick | 10 November 2007
Although Sidebar is a new feature that's unique to Windows Vista, you may be familiar with the fact that mini-applications called gadgets or something similar have been with us since the earliest days of computers.
Finding New Gadgets
Category: Using Windows Sidebar |
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462 Read |
Posted: VistaTrick | 10 November 2007
In order to make it easy for users to find new gadgets that will run on both the Windows Sidebar and desktop, Microsoft has created a few Web communities. The first is called, appropriately enough, Microsoft Gadgets (http://microsoftgadgets.com/).
11 On page 103 news has been found.
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