Putting a unicode character into a terminal window (or even into OOo)

2008-09-14 Thread Paul
Hi, Under Worm, if I press alt-132 I end up with an umlaut a. This doesn't work under OOo 3 or in a terminal window. How can I get the same result under Linux? I should know this, but for some reason My system is set as UTF-en_GB. TTFN Paul -- Sie können mich aufreizen und wirklich heiß

Re: Putting a unicode character into a terminal window (or even into OOo)

2008-09-14 Thread Patrick O'Callaghan
On Sun, 2008-09-14 at 14:41 +0100, Paul wrote: Hi, Under Worm, if I press alt-132 I end up with an umlaut a. This doesn't work under OOo 3 or in a terminal window. How can I get the same result under Linux? I use dead keys. I have my keyboard set to US International (under KDE) and get ä by

Re: Putting a unicode character into a terminal window (or even into OOo)

2008-09-14 Thread Dave Feustel
On Sun, Sep 14, 2008 at 02:41:42PM +0100, Paul wrote: Hi, Under Worm, if I press alt-132 I end up with an umlaut a. This doesn't work under OOo 3 or in a terminal window. How can I get the same result under Linux? I should know this, but for some reason My system is set as

Re: Putting a unicode character into a terminal window (or even into OOo)

2008-09-14 Thread Michael T. Sullivan
Paul wrote: Hi, Under Worm, if I press alt-132 I end up with an umlaut a. This doesn't work under OOo 3 or in a terminal window. How can I get the same result under Linux? In GTK+ based programs like Gnome Terminal or OOo 3 you can type Ctrl+Shift+U followed by the Unicode hexadecimal code

Re: Putting a unicode character into a terminal window (or even into OOo)

2008-09-14 Thread Gordon Messmer
Michael T. Sullivan wrote: Paul wrote: Under Worm, if I press alt-132 I end up with an umlaut a. This doesn't work under OOo 3 or in a terminal window. How can I get the same result under Linux? In GTK+ based programs like Gnome Terminal or OOo 3 you can type Ctrl+Shift+U followed by the