Glad about the food. Not to flog a dead horse much longer, but what I'm worried
about is not any styling I might or might not choose to add, but the problem of
people pasting in (via the clipboard) versions of pi which are not expressed by
0x3C0. I think the only solution is to search the enormo
On 31.08.2014 15:05, Graham Samuel wrote:
Richmond -
Sorry to hear you're in hospital, Richmond - get better soon! I wonder what
Bulgarian hospital food is like...
Hospital food is as hospital food does, all over the world. But my
wonderful wife keeps bringing
me goodies!
What is far more
Richmond -
Sorry to hear you're in hospital, Richmond - get better soon! I wonder what
Bulgarian hospital food is like...
What you tell me fills me with trepidation. My notion is that there will be an
app, totally out of my control, running on some box (PC. Mac or Linux -
probably the latter)
On 30.08.2014 19:50, Graham Samuel wrote:
Thanks for the swift response, Richmond? Are you in Bulgaria?
Yup: in hospital :(
I kind of understand what you mean. But using your example, if someone had an
Anglo-Saxon word processor, and chose to italicise 'thorn' (if that is
meaningful!), an
Thanks for the swift response, Richmond? Are you in Bulgaria?
I kind of understand what you mean. But using your example, if someone had an
Anglo-Saxon word processor, and chose to italicise 'thorn' (if that is
meaningful!), and then pasted a string containing this from the word processor
to an
On 30.08.2014 19:29, Graham Samuel wrote:
I know people are lining up for the conference (wish I was there!) so I am not
sure who's listening, but here goes.
On advice from Fraser Gordon, I've been trying to use LC 7 to experiment with
Unicode. I've had some tricky problems with the latest ve
I know people are lining up for the conference (wish I was there!) so I am not
sure who's listening, but here goes.
On advice from Fraser Gordon, I've been trying to use LC 7 to experiment with
Unicode. I've had some tricky problems with the latest version in the LC
'downloads' catalogue (DP10)