On 08/06/2016 07:19 PM, Nikoli A. McCracken wrote:
> The first letter of every sentence in an article or email, is Initial cap!
> Who the hey writes like that anymore?
Only those who respect the reader.
> Didn’t that go away along about Shakespeare’s time? I went to Msoft Tech
> support, and the
I think Nikoli meant "each LINE" (not each SENTENCE).
On Sun, Aug 7, 2016 at 7:04 AM, James Knott wrote:
> On 08/06/2016 07:19 PM, Nikoli A. McCracken wrote:
> > The first letter of every sentence in an article or email, is Initial
> cap!
> > Who the hey writes like that anymore?
>
> Only those
He said “each sentence.” If he meant “each line,” as I suspect, then it’s
likely because every line ends with a CRLF, so the next line obviously starts a
new paragraph, in which the initial letter is capitalized, as it should be.
Nikoli, for an e-mail client, you can try Thunderbird. Many folks
> On Aug 6, 2016, at 17:29, Brian Barker wrote:
>
>> 1 virus 2 viri 3 virii 4 viriv. .. 9 virix
>
> Ho, ho! A good one!
original credit goes to Rob Slade [9 was my own addition]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Slade
—
jt - j...@jt-mj.net
With sufficient thrust, pigs fly just fine. H
> On Aug 7, 2016, at 07:04, James Knott wrote:
>
> A sentence always starts with a capital.
"iPhones are nice".
—
jt - j...@jt-mj.net
The measure of a country's greatness is its ability to retain compassion in
times of crisis. - Thurgood Marshall, US Supreme Court Justice (1908-1993)
On 07/08/16 12:08, Maurice Howe wrote:
> I think Nikoli meant "each LINE" (not each SENTENCE).
Probably because he is not allowing automatic wrapping at line end and
is, instead, manually inserting a paragraph at his perception of a line
ending. This would also go some way to explaining his line s
I'm sorry for your difficulties, Penny.
I think there is some confusion about the different ways that you can send and
receive emails using Windows 10. There is a mail tool that is part of Windows
10 and it will work on the desktop.
You can find that tool, named "Mail" on your start menu. If
the programm is now downloaded. when i click nothing appears that looks like
writing a document myself.
I lost my access to microsoft 2003 word (do not know how to recover, as lost CD
and code, shared with a friend jears ago).
I do not see any possibility to start writing a new document with t
On 08/07/2016 03:13 PM, herma reeskamp wrote:
> the programm is now downloaded. when i click nothing appears that looks like
> writing a document myself.
>
>
> I lost my access to microsoft 2003 word (do not know how to recover, as lost
> CD and code, shared with a friend jears ago).
>
> I do not
I am very frustrated in trying to find answers to questions about Open Office,
it all sounds too technical.
The main problem I have at present is trying to type in text the symbols found
in music: I have a sharp symbol on my keyboard but none of the others,
particularly needing the flat symbol.
On Sun, Aug 7, 2016 at 2:51 PM, wrote:
> I am very frustrated in trying to find answers to questions about Open
> Office, it all sounds too technical.
> The main problem I have at present is trying to type in text the symbols
> found in music: I have a sharp symbol on my keyboard but none of t
On 08/07/2016 02:13 PM, herma reeskamp wrote:
the programm is now downloaded. when i click nothing appears that looks like
writing a document myself.
I lost my access to microsoft 2003 word (do not know how to recover, as lost CD
and code, shared with a friend jears ago).
I do not see any p
On 08/07/2016 02:51 PM, gmbg...@gmail.com wrote:
I am very frustrated in trying to find answers to questions about Open Office,
it all sounds too technical.
The main problem I have at present is trying to type in text the symbols found
in music: I have a sharp symbol on my keyboard but none o
At 20:51 07/08/2016 +0100, Gillian Bonly wrote:
I am very frustrated in trying to find answers to questions about
Open Office, it all sounds too technical.
Your problem here sounds more to do with your computer hardware or
operating system, in fact.
The main problem I have at present is tryi
Greetings,
One doesn't need to summon up Linux to get all the special characters one
needs for music, mathematics, or most anything else. It's all there in MS
Windows, waiting for you to use. First, do a search ON YOUR COMPUTER for
"Character Map." On my HP Envy notebook running Windows 10,
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