Re: MS Command Prompt

2002-03-12 Thread Asmus Freytag
At 09:31 AM 3/8/02 -0500, Patrick Rourke wrote: Don't know if this will help any with NT. I am using Lucida console on all my command prompt windows, so that's the reason I could never see the problem. You can set properties like font and color for the command prompt and have that information

MS Command Prompt

2002-03-08 Thread Patrick Rourke
From: Doug Ewell [EMAIL PROTECTED] Indie was doing the right thing by typing Alt+0248 to get the Latin-1 character, instead of Alt+248 to get the MS-DOS character. That isn't the problem. In Windows 95, 98, and NT 4, everything that happens in the command prompt goes through the MS-DOS

Re: MS Command Prompt

2002-03-08 Thread Doug Ewell
Patrick Rourke [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: In Windows XP, if I type the Alt+0248 in the command prompt with the font set to raster fonts, I get an o. If I type it in a command prompt with the font set to Lucida Console, I get the ø. However, it only works if I change the font before I type

MS Command Prompt

2002-03-07 Thread Magda Danish (Unicode)
I have MS Windows NT 4 installed with Service Pack 6a on several PCs. The keyboard is set to English (United States). Within all 32-bit applications ALT-0248 ø is working fine. However, within a MS Command Prompt the above ALT does not work and I get a o instead. The keyb in MS DOS is set

Re: MS Command Prompt

2002-03-07 Thread Martin Kochanski
about this. At 10:00 07/03/02 -0800, Magda Danish (Unicode) wrote: I have MS Windows NT 4 installed with Service Pack 6a on several PCs. The keyboard is set to English (United States). Within all 32-bit applications ALT-0248 ø is working fine. However, within a MS Command Prompt the above ALT does

Re: MS Command Prompt

2002-03-07 Thread Asmus Freytag
with Service Pack 6a on several PCs. The keyboard is set to English (United States). Within all 32-bit applications ALT-0248 ø is working fine. However, within a MS Command Prompt the above ALT does not work and I get a o instead. The keyb in MS DOS is set to us 437. This means that the ALT-0248

Re: MS Command Prompt

2002-03-07 Thread Doug Ewell
, March 07, 2002 4:28 pm Subject: Re: MS Command Prompt At 11:45 PM 3/7/02 +, Martin Kochanski wrote: This is because the MSDOS Prompt is using Code Page 850 rather than Code Page 1252. 248 in CP 850 is ° and in CP1252 is ø. 195 in CP 850 is a line-drawing character and in CP1252 is Ã