On 3 March 2010 17:35, Stan Goodman <[email protected]> wrote: > At 11:12:35 on Wednesday Wednesday 03 March 2010, Dotan Cohen > <[email protected]> wrote: >> On 3 March 2010 11:03, Dov Grobgeld <[email protected]> wrote: >> > In lack of a better solution, you can always launch gucharmap, select >> > the requested (zero-width) character, and then do cut and paste. >> >> If I could easily bookmark the character, then that would be a decent >> workaround. However, at the moment it is too cumbersome. >> >> KDE did once have an easy way of adding arbitrary characters that were >> saved in Kcharselect however that was removed for KDE4: >> https://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=190776 > > Yet another reason for avoiding KDE4 like the plague. > > I've solved my own ₪ problem, as well as lots of other symbols I use from > time to time, by installing both the charselect applet (the few most > frequetly used symbols) and the kcharacterselector application (for the > availability of any others for which an odd need crops up) in my second > panel. That was a suggestion by Duncan (last name forgotten, sorry), for > which I am grateful.
Is that on KDE 3, KDE 4, or Gnome? Can you provide a link to the charselect applet? I am googling but I cannot find it. Thanks. -- Dotan Cohen http://bido.com http://what-is-what.com Please CC me if you want to be sure that I read your message. I do not read all list mail. _______________________________________________ Linux-il mailing list [email protected] http://mailman.cs.huji.ac.il/mailman/listinfo/linux-il
