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Closed 8 years ago.
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I work with Microsoft Office Word 2010, and I want to type numbers with Hindi language.
So I go to "Options" and set Numeral to Hindi.
Now I can write hindi numbers ...
But in charts, my numbers don't change to Hindi, and they are still Latin. (I set MS Excel numeral to Hindi too.)
How can I change these??? This is a bad problem!!
A workaround would be to download a Hindi font, say from here: Hindi Fonts. Paste them in the fonts folder in Control Panel. Restart word. Now, in your chart, select the numbers that you wish to show in Hindi, and select the Hindi font you just downloaded. Use Font2 or Font3 from the given link, and it should do the trick.
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Closed 2 years ago.
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Are there any Unicode characters that essentially are non-overwriting backspaces?
I have 𝄞𝄚 and I would like them to overlap.
No, there is no such Unicode character.
In the days long gone, this used to be the functionality of the control code U+0008 BACKSPACE, but the Unicode Standard ascribes no further semantics to that character beyond “It’s that old ASCII control code”, and you would be hard-pressed to find any modern application that supports this archaic behaviour.
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Closed 7 years ago.
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Is there any way, via settings or a custom script, to force the use of ASCII-only encoding in Outlook 2013?
I often pass one-liners and code snippets between myself and other developers, and we will copy-paste them into a command-line prompt for testing various tools. A common issue is that the editor will replace hyphens - with some wider "full width hyphen" or "dash" character, that gets converted to an accented ASCII character when we paste it into prompts.
Right now, we resolve it by pasting it into GVIM on Windows and running a VIM script to handle the conversion, but it's a pain and can be unreliable, especially for other developers who hate using VIM. Since all correspondence is handled in English, French, or Italian anyways (we don't get picky with accents), there's no need for unicode support. Can we turn it off?
Thanks.
No, and this has nothing to do with Unicode support in Outlook. This is how Outlook editor (Word) works.
EDIT: you can turn smart quotes off in Outlook: http://www.extendoffice.com/documents/outlook/2084-outlook-disable-turn-off-smart-quotes.html
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Closed 1 year ago.
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I would like to know how to save a document using Notepad++ encoded in extended ASCII. When I select ANSI encoding, it is saved as UTF-8 codification (I checked it in HxD, program to see hex data file).
You can't do it with Notepad++. The best way is to paste your text into Wordpad and then save as MS-DOS text format.
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Closed 7 years ago.
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Writing semi technical Functional Requirements 7 Business Requirements I often have to add in words that are Column Names or other data that is separated by underscores.
I'd like to stop Word from flagging words with underscores as spelling mistakes.
Have to use word so can't change to something else :)
Ideally not flagging Camel Cased words as spelling mistakes would be great but that I'm fairly sure isn't possible.
I'd like to not flag fild_name whilst continuing to flag fild?
Is this possible?
Mark the text as No proofing or grammar checked. Select the text then in Word 2010 this can be found under Review->Language->Set Proofing Language and click the Do Not Check Spelling or grammar box.
You could put this in a macro and then put that as a button on the toobar or quick access toolbar and save clicks.
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Closed 5 years ago.
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I have in Word ‘hello’ and when I paste it I get 018hello 019 so the apostrophes turn into these strange characters.
The type of web application should not matter as the behaviour is different depending on the workstation I use.
I checked with Notepad, Excel and Wordpad and this issue does not occur, only for Word.
It should be a Word/IE setting .
Do you know which one ?
Thanks
The quotation marks in word are not the "regular" quotation marks. Word automatically replaces quotations as you type them with fancy ones called "smart quotes". Since your browser does not understand smart quotes it replaces them.
This is known as the Word "smart quotes" feature. There should be a place to turn it off somewhere in the Word settings.
More information can be found at the Quotation mark glyphs Wikipedia article.