Most of the time, I only see the code with no letter associated with it, and
the Character set drop-down list is grayed out. That's what I see when I
select any of the Webdings, Wingdings, or Zapf Dingbats fonts. 

I noticed that when I select Verdana or Times New Roman, I do see the actual
letter information. That makes it easy.

Thanks for all these additional resources and ideas, Tammy, Mike, John, and
Steve. Very helpful!

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Linda G. Gallagher
TechCom Plus, LLC
lindag at techcomplus dot com
www.techcomplus.com
303-450-9076 or 800-500-3144
User guides, online help, FrameMaker and
WebWorks ePublisher templates
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
Manager, STC Consulting and Independent
Contracting SIG
http://www.stcsig.org/cic/index.html
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 


-----Original Message-----
From: Mike Wickham [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Monday, March 12, 2007 9:51 AM
To: Linda G. Gallagher
Cc: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Creating special bullets

> At the risk of sounding stupid, how do you know what letter 
> corresponds to the symbol you want? That's the crux of my question.

If you're running Windows, load Character Map. Then click on any character
in the display array. At the bottom of the window, you'll see the Unicode
value and the keyboard character.

    Example: "U+0051: Latin Capital Letter Q"

That's if the Character Set dropdown is set to Unicode. If you set it to
Windows:Western, you'll also get the decimal value:

  Example: "U+0051 (0x51): Latin Capital Letter Q"

Mike Wickham



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