Yong Luo wrote:

> Thanks, I know the result can be displayed in .lyx
> file (what you see is what you want), but I don't know
> how to do it.

You mean, you don't know how to input the � character? There are three
ways:
1. Cut and paste it from somewhere else.
2. Using the compose key it can be input as <Compose>"o . This requires
that you have the compose key set up correctly in your X11 config files.
3. Using dead keys, it can be input as "o . However, it appears that dead
key support is broken in lyx running on several modern linux distros
because they added the unofficial Qt-immodule patch which requires an
additional patch to the lyx sources to work correctly. We're working on
that.

How LyX stores the � character in your .lyx file will depend on the locale
code page that you use. For example, in the latin-1 encoding it will be
stored as the character 0xf6 whilst it would be something entirely
different in another encoding.

I believe that the plan for LyX 1.5 is to change the file encoding of *all*
files to UTF-8 meaning that a single LyX document written in Germany will
be understandable on a machine in China or in India.

In particular, � will be stored as the pair of characters 0xc3 0xb6.

-- 
Angus

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