On Feb 18, 2012, at 8:16 AM, Eric Weir wrote:

> After both types of imports I get the following message: "Could not find 
> LaTeX command for character''(code point 0x2028)
> Some characters of your document are probably not representable in the chosen 
> encoding. Changing the document encoding to utf8 could help." 
> 
> I've verified that Scrivener uses Unicode UTF8.
> 
> Perhaps you or someone one the list will know what the offending character is?

Googling "codepoint 0x2028" I immediately located a previous post here by 
Jürgen responding to another user's query in which he said it was a line 
separater, and suggested doing a view > view source, locating the offending 
character, which would appear in red.

I did that. There was only one instance in the source. But when I tried 
compiling after doing so I got the same error. This time I clicked on the "view 
complete log" button in the error window. I found six instances of the 
following error report:

aa! LaTeX Error: Command \textquotedbl unavailable in encoding OT1., See the 
LaTeX manual or LaTeX Companion for explanation., Type  H <return>  for 
immediate help.,  ...                                              ,            
                                       , l.380 Evident in \textquotedbl,        
                       {}Avoidable Losses\textquotedbl{}' alternative

It looked to me like these were situations in which I used an apostrophe in 
combination with a double quote. I searched for that combination and found that 
some occurrences were different than others. I don't know how to describe the 
difference except to say some did not look like a standard single/double quote 
combination. More like a doublequote/right-leaning backtic combination. 

I lost count, but I think there were six of them. I deleted them and replaced 
them with a doublequote/singlequote combination. Tried compiling again and got 
the same errors. 

I am at a loss. Help would be appreciated.

Thanks,
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Eric Weir
Decatur, GA 
[email protected]

"We do not inherit the earth from our ancestors, 
we borrow it from our children." 

- Chief Seattle.

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