I did

 export LANG=fi_FI.UTF-8

and it works for me on the mac terminal, but the above command is a
bash thing.  Although its not exactly printing right, it puts the dot
more in the right hand corner rather than above.

-- Andy

On Thu, Jul 2, 2009 at 9:26 PM, Luke<[email protected]> wrote:
>
> I'm trying to get the Unicode 'COMBINING DOT ABOVE'  character to
> work.  This is used for the Newtonian shorthand notation for a time
> derivative:
> http://www.fileformat.info/info/unicode/char/0307/index.htm
>
> As far as I can tell, you would follow any unicode character with the
> above character, and it should put the dot above it:
> print(u"q\u0307")
> should print q with a dot above it.  Other diacriticals seems to work,
> for example, the 'COMBINING FERMATA':
> print(u"q\u0352")
> prints the q with a weird little fermata above it.
>
> I tried python3 and it does the same thing, so it seems that perhaps
> my terminal, or the font I'm using in my terminal, doesn't support
> that particular character.  I am using Konsole in Kubuntu 9.04, with
> the character encoding set to:  Unicode--> UTF-8.
>
> Can anybody else get the 'COMBINING DOT ABOVE' character to work in
> their terminals?
>
> ~Luke
>
> >
>

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