Difference between revisions of "Talk:Greek Letters"
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I'm not sure that this is the best approach to incorporate Greek letters... different browsers will render the font differently, and they don't always look Greek. A better approach might be to show the ASCII designations and suggest using ALT + XXX and/or Character Map in windows (don't know how it works with Macs, but suspect there's a similar method). See Wikipedia's article on [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help:Special_characters Special Characters]. [[User:FreshBoy|FreshBoy]] 12:15, 20 March 2007 (EDT) | I'm not sure that this is the best approach to incorporate Greek letters... different browsers will render the font differently, and they don't always look Greek. A better approach might be to show the ASCII designations and suggest using ALT + XXX and/or Character Map in windows (don't know how it works with Macs, but suspect there's a similar method). See Wikipedia's article on [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help:Special_characters Special Characters]. [[User:FreshBoy|FreshBoy]] 12:15, 20 March 2007 (EDT) | ||
− | Seconding Freshboy's thoughts here. I don't really know of any totally universal way to make greek letters display, but Unicode/UTF-8 is a bit better than the Symbol font. My version of Firefox refuses to display anything in Symbol, Wingdings, etc., and the default Arial/Helvetica/sans-serif used by most systems should have the full character set, though I know not all older browsers support it. | + | Seconding Freshboy's thoughts here. I don't really know of any totally universal way to make greek letters display, but Unicode/UTF-8 is a bit better than the Symbol font. My version of Firefox refuses to display anything in Symbol, Wingdings, etc., and the default Arial/Helvetica/sans-serif used by most systems should have the full character set, though I know not all older browsers support it. [[User:djlynch|David Lynch]] 11:45, 14 August 2007 (EDT) |
Latest revision as of 08:42, 14 August 2007
Special Characters
I'm not sure that this is the best approach to incorporate Greek letters... different browsers will render the font differently, and they don't always look Greek. A better approach might be to show the ASCII designations and suggest using ALT + XXX and/or Character Map in windows (don't know how it works with Macs, but suspect there's a similar method). See Wikipedia's article on Special Characters. FreshBoy 12:15, 20 March 2007 (EDT)
Seconding Freshboy's thoughts here. I don't really know of any totally universal way to make greek letters display, but Unicode/UTF-8 is a bit better than the Symbol font. My version of Firefox refuses to display anything in Symbol, Wingdings, etc., and the default Arial/Helvetica/sans-serif used by most systems should have the full character set, though I know not all older browsers support it. David Lynch 11:45, 14 August 2007 (EDT)