Any suggestions?
Dag T. Hoelseth
--
Dag T. Hoelseth <dag...@my-deja.com>
http://www.geocities.com/dagtho/
Sent via Deja.com
http://www.deja.com/
>I am looking for the HTML code for a "scilicet",
>that is a "reversed small c sort of followed by a colon".
>
>Any suggestions?
>
>Dag T. Hoelseth
>
I've just checked on the notepad text file of codes I have - and it
doesn't seem to be there. There is a cedilla, a ligature and lots of
other interesting ones.
Its only 9k if anyone wants it they can email me.
:)
--
http://www.htmlcook.com
html as simple as beans on toast
http://www.searchenginescandal.com
http://website.lineone.net/~diane_norton/indiary.htm
: >I am looking for the HTML code for a "scilicet",
: >that is a "reversed small c sort of followed by a colon".
: >
: >Any suggestions?
Try:
http://www.htmlhelp.com/reference/html40/entities/
===================
Sid Ismail "Who dares to teach must
http://fly.to/elsid never cease to learn."
===================
I do not know the entity code but why not use
ss: and style it. Common practice in legal documents at least in the
Anglo world
Tim Morris
Surely an idea when writing in English, however I wanted to be as true
to the original document (in Norwegian) as possible, the equivalent
to "ss:" would probably be "dvs." in Norwegian.
Dag T. Hoelseth
--
Dag T. Hoelseth <dag...@my-deja.com>
http://www.geocities.com/dagtho/royalty.html
http://www.geocities.com/dagtho/norway.html
(Hoelseth wrote the following, not "Mogga")
> : >I am looking for the HTML code for a "scilicet",
> : >that is a "reversed small c sort of followed by a colon".
> : >
> : >Any suggestions?
>
> Try:
> http://www.htmlhelp.com/reference/html40/entities/
Thanks for the link, I have bookmarked it. But I couldn't find a
scilicet there...
: In article <po368t8ss2jg8e3ef...@4ax.com>,
: elsid[at]netactive[dot]co[dot]za wrote:
: > On Thu, 08 Feb 2001 19:21:39 GMT, mo...@mogga.com (Mogga) wrote:
:
: (Hoelseth wrote the following, not "Mogga")
:
: > : >I am looking for the HTML code for a "scilicet",
: > : >that is a "reversed small c sort of followed by a colon".
: > : >
: > : >Any suggestions?
: >
: > Try:
: > http://www.htmlhelp.com/reference/html40/entities/
:
: Thanks for the link, I have bookmarked it. But I couldn't find a
: scilicet there...
I suggest you scan it, or design it in PSP or something, and save as a gif.
Luck,
>Surely an idea when writing in English, however I wanted to be as true
>to the original document (in Norwegian) as possible, the equivalent
>to "ss:" would probably be "dvs." in Norwegian.
>
>Dag T. Hoelseth
>
Danish keyboard? Danish software?
Yes, that is also a good suggestion.
Thanks,
Dag T. Hoelseth
--
Dag T. Hoelseth <dag...@my-deja.com>
http://www.geocities.com/dagtho/royalty.html
http://www.geocities.com/dagtho/norway.html
: > I suggest you scan it, or design it in PSP or something, and save as
: a gif.
:
: Yes, that is also a good suggestion.
:
: Thanks,
:
: Dag T. Hoelseth
See the gif (big sigma with an italic L under it) here:
http://www.elsid.f2s.com/usenet1/sigma.html
Looks natural, huh? Your need is similar. :)
>I am looking for the HTML code for a "scilicet",
>that is a "reversed small c sort of followed by a colon".
I haven't seen such a character, and there's nothing under the name
"scilicet" in Unicode. So I guess this is one of the symbols that have
not (yet) been taken into character set standards. (I tried to look for
something similar in the Unicode block "Letterlike Symbols" - after all,
it could be there under some other name - but didn't find anything
promising.)
Using an image seems to be the only possibility then. What you use as
ALT text naturally depends on the language of the document.
--
Yucca (who used to use Jukka....@hut.fi and
authored the http://www.hut.fi/u/jkorpela/ site,
both of which were made defunct by HUT (2001-01-17))