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
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
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
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
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
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