I am retype pages of German text and I can't seem to figure out how to get the umlauts done. I probable spelt that incorrectly, but what I mean is the 2 dots over a letter. Any idea what keys I may need to hit on the keyboard? Thanks.
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It must be a pain in the neck for you guys typing the Umlaute - as it was for me when visiting my sister in Calgary and trying to email a message in German to German friends from her PC. Alternatively, you could of course just add an 'e' to the umlauted vocal - 'ae' for ä, 'ue' for ü etc. If you plan to do proper Umlaute regularly, just buy a German keyboard, which has keys for all the quaint German characters, also 'ß' for the 'sharp' s. I'm sure you will find a pretty good deal from ebay.de. Much less bother, and you can even type all English characters with it, too .
Regards, Karl
Originally posted by Paul ChepurkoThanks everyone. The character map works great.
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Paul - in MSWord, if you hold down (press) control shift : then release and type your letter upper or lower case, you will get an umlaut over the letter as shown
ÄäÖöÜü
which then can be copied any where - even here!Last edited by W McSwiggan; 06-22-2005, 06:19 PM.
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Hello Everyone!
MSWord has another facility that can be tweaked to make it very easy to insert any symbols you want:
If you toggle 'Insert' in the menu, you will see 'Symbol' part way down the list. Left-click on symbol and it will present a table of all of the letters and symbols supported by the typeset that you are using. Notice, too, that you can define a shortcut key (e.g. CTRL-o) to give you an umlauted "o" or whatever symbol you use frequently in correspondence.
I have CTRL-e set up to print the EURO sign as I often correspond with collectors in Europe.
As always, there is more than one workaround with PC's.
Cheers,
Laurie
<o></o>
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Uemlauts
In WordPerfect, click in "Insert" at the top bar, then click on "Symbol", the top selection on the pop-up, and then chose the "Multinational", and you are presented with your choice of a couple of hundred different symbols for other languages, including upper- and lower-case Uemlauts, French accented letters, etc. You can chose to insert the character you select and close, or insert the character and leave the window open at the bottom of the screen for subsequent insertions without too much extra effort.
Bob Lembke
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