rusi <rustompm...@gmail.com> wrote: > On Feb 12, 10:51 am, Steven D'Aprano <steve > +comp.lang.pyt...@pearwood.info> wrote: > > On Sun, 12 Feb 2012 15:38:37 +1100, Chris Angelico wrote: > > > Everything that displays text to a human needs to translate bytes into > > > glyphs, and the usual way to do this conceptually is to go via > > > characters. Pretending that it's all the same thing really means > > > pretending that one byte represents one character and that each > > > character is depicted by one glyph. And that's doomed to failure, unless > > > everyone speaks English with no foreign symbols - so, no mathematical > > > notations. > > > > Pardon me, but you can't even write *English* in ASCII. > > > > You can't say that it cost you £10 to courier your résumé to the head > > office of Encyclopædia Britanica to apply for the position of Staff > > Coördinator. (Admittedly, the umlaut on the second "o" looks a bit stuffy > > and old-fashioned, but it is traditional English.) > > > > Hell, you can't even write in *American*: you can't say that the recipe > > for the 20¢ WobblyBurger™ is © 2012 WobblyBurgerWorld Inc. > > [Quite OT but...] How do you type all this? > [Note: I grew up on APL so unlike Rick I am genuinely asking :-) ]
[Emacs speficic] Many different ways of course, but in emacs, you can select e.g. the TeX input method with C-x RET C-\ TeX RET. which does all of the above symbols with the exception of the cent symbol (or maybe I missed it) - you type the thing in the first column and you get the thing in the second column \pounds £ \'e é \ae æ \"o ö ^{TM} ™ \copyright © I gave up on the cent symbol and used ucs-insert (C-x 8 RET) which allows you to type a name, in this case CENT SIGN to get ¢. Nick -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list