Umm, what you say about Word's equation editor is not entirely accurate. 
Microsoft used to use a reduced version of MathType as Word's built in equation 
editor; but as of Word 2007, the default equation editor is a brand-new tool, 
developed in-house by Microsoft. The old MathType-based editor is supported 
primarily to render legacy equations.

-FR

________________________________________
From: Framers <framers-bounces+docudoc=hotmail....@lists.frameusers.com> on 
behalf of Craig W. Johnson <c...@well.com>
Sent: Friday, May 20, 2016 1:49 PM
To: framers@lists.frameusers.com
Subject: Re: [Framers] I need a "hat" in an equation

The unicode code for combining (i.e. zero-width) circumflex is hex 0302, and it 
should follow the character it appears above. If you don't have a unicode entry 
method handy, using Frame's replace function - "W" with "W\u0302" - will get 
you the code, BUT, you need the circumflex to be declared in a font that will 
show the code (Times New Roman or Arial both work). You'll still need to do 
some fussing with changing the spread of the W, and moving the mark vertically.

I set a lot of books with a lot of math, and rather than mess with FrameMaker's 
editor, or continually potschke things together by hand, I rely on MathType, 
which will produce any number of outputs, including EPS and bitmap formats. It 
saves a lot of time because it's a superset of Word's equation editor, and 
usually Word equations import seamlessly (or at least more reliably than much 
else imports from Word). You can also specify something akin to named 
stylesheets for font and positioning in equations (so you can have, say, 
separate styles for text equations and table equations), and support for 
micro-positioning is good. It also has support for TeX, which is another option 
here, but setting that up and using it makes Frame's learning curve look like a 
walk in the park.

Of course, using any auxiliary app will also gives you a bunch of graphics 
files to keep track of, but if your math is at all complicated it's probably 
worthwhile.

MathType for Windows costs around $100 and may be downloaded as a 30-day 
unfettered demo from <http://www.dessci.com/en/products/mathtype/default.htm>. 
It's also available in a strong Mac version, for those (like me) who prefer 
running Frame using a VM.

Hope this helps.

Craig Johnson
Remex Publishing


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