just type in character map, and your machine's will pop up -
or you can go on-line, search for character map and find many
for many different fonts.
From: Tom Davies <[email protected]>
Date: Thu, Sep 11, 2014 at 5:03 AM
Subject: Re: [libreoffice-users] How do I insert a thin space in Libre in
Windows?
To: Johan de Smidt <[email protected]>
Cc: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
Hi :)
These guides might be more useful in general
https://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Documentation/Publications
If you go to
Tools - Customise
then you can reconfigure one of the keyboard combinations to be pretty much
anything you want. I'd suggest seeing what Ctrl space or Alt space or even
shift&space do at the moment and consider changing one of those to be a
thin space.
If you are serious about doing Desktop Publishing then a word-processor is
not quite right for the task. Writer is better than most but it might be
worth considering Scribus or something else designed to be a proper DTP.
Scribus is in the same eco-system as LibreOffice/OpenOffice and can use one
(or several) of the output-files that LibreOffice can save in.
I'm not sure what the U stands for nor how to get such coding into a
document. Hopefully someone else might help with that later.
Regards from
tom :)
On 11 September 2014 08:07, Johan de Smidt <[email protected]> wrote:
> Hi
> What is the keyboard shortcut for inserting a thin space in Windows?
> Your website help isn't much help. Eventually found your suggestion, using
> Google, to use U+2009.
> What does "U" stand for? The usual keys don't work.
>
> --
> Kind regards
> Johan de Smidt
>
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