I agree completely with Thibaud !
Best wishes
Gianni Ferrari
-
2013/7/7 Thibaud Taudin Chabot
> This looks not logic.
> The unit symbol comes *after *the value and not in between. If you put
> the ° above the decimal "." then what unit is the value after the decimal
> "."?
This looks not logic.
The unit symbol comes after the value and not in
between. If you put the ° above the decimal "."
then what unit is the value after the decimal "."?
Everywhere the notation [value] [measuring unit]
is used, even if the [value] has a fractional part.
But an artist never rea
On 06/07/2013 8:38 AM, Barry Wainwright
wrote:
It can be done, but how the characters are rendered depends very
much on the application used to render them.
There are a block of unicode characters called "Combining
Diacritica
Of course, the better way to do it would be to generate it as a vector graphic:
Characters.pdf
Description: Adobe PDF document
This is done in the following steps:In your graphics application of choice, type a text block "127°.42"Convert the text block to an outlineExplode the outline into discret
It can be done, but how the characters are rendered depends very much on the application used to render them.There are a block of unicode characters called "Combining Diacritical Marks" which are used to modify the preceding character. These characters include unicode character U-309A (UTF-8 E3 82
o a pdf with the modified font embedded.
Regards,
John
--
Dr J Davis
Flowton Dials
From: J M
To: sundial@uni-koeln.de
Sent: Saturday, 6 July 2013, 1:37
Subject: Unicode characters for degrees, minutes, seconds above the decima