Re: [Framers] Inserting checkmark in a table cell (FM12)

2020-07-22 Thread ideaslists
Why not just create a Character tag/style set only to Wingdings2. Type in a capitol P or R in the cells you want checkmarks in. Select the cells and apply the style? (I did this 2019, not 12, but I think it would be the same.) David Creamer IDEAS Training

Re: [Framers] [EXTERNAL] Re: Images make scrolling through a Frame document problematic

2020-07-22 Thread Blackmon, Ramona
Tip 1: Don't scroll. Advance pages using the page number box at the bottom of the screen. It can be awkward, but it's faster than waiting for images to load. Tip 2: If you are working on writing text and can make due without seeing the images for a bit, Frame works much faster if you go to View

Re: [Framers] Inserting checkmark in a table cell (FM12)

2020-07-22 Thread Fred Ridder
One thing that is not intuitively obvious is that you cannot use the displayed Unicode character number when using the Windows Alt-key shortcut for entering extended characters. The problem is that Unicode character numbers are always expressed in hexadecimal while the Alt-key shortcut works

Re: [Framers] [EXTERNAL] Inserting checkmark in a table cell (FM12)

2020-07-22 Thread David Artman
FWIW, you can insert any unicode character with keyboard as well.  https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/office/insert-ascii-or-unicode-latin-based-symbols-and-characters-d13f58d3-7bcb-44a7-a4d5-972ee12e50e0#bm1DCA:d.a.d Original message From: Tom Beiswenger Date: 7/22/20 07:49

Re: [Framers] [EXTERNAL] Inserting checkmark in a table cell (FM12)

2020-07-22 Thread Tom Beiswenger
Neat trick! Since I only use the check mark infrequently and probably will forget all of this by the time I need it again, I created a new character tag - Check-0080 - in Character Designer and added it to the character catalog that I have in all of my templates and then imported the character

Re: [Framers] Inserting checkmark in a table cell (FM12)

2020-07-22 Thread Shmuel Wolfson
Maybe this is clear to some people, but I thought I might clarify this since I just figured it out myself. Alt+ works for Unicode fonts as well, but only for the first 255 characters of the font. ANSI fonts are 8-bit fonts, which only have 255 characters. Unicode fonts have a very large