One solution is to have a variable called pound and put {{=pound}} in
the template.
However there has to be a better way!
On Jun 24, 9:31 am, apple simo...@gmail.com wrote:
If I edit my template in a text editor then the £ sign shows up
normally. If I edit my template in microsoft word and
I think the problem is with your choice of editor. All of these entities
appear to work for me:
#xa3; #163; #xa3; pound;
Hurrah! I have the answer.
In Microsoft Word 2010 go to File/Options/Advancedscroll to bottom
and choose web options/encoding. Then select to save document in
unicode (UTF8) format; and tick the box saying always save in the
default encoding.
On Jun 24, 12:41 pm, villas villa...@gmail.com
I would have great difficulty recommending Word as an editor for working
with HTML because of all the things it does under the covers. Not trying to
stir up flames, just trying to make your life easier. As a word processor
Word is okay.
Well put, ron_m. I would have no difficulty recommending against using Word
to edit HTML. It's just not the right tool...at all. There are so many good
free/low-cost options on all platforms that using Word makes little sense.
I would not use it for working with HTML normally. However if you have
something like a mailing letter or an invoice then you might want
someone to edit that who has no knowledge of HTML. They can use
tables, outlining and other formatting features of MS Office which
they know; and then load it up
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