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- Path: nyx10.cs.du.edu!not-for-mail
- From: tchun@nyx10.cs.du.edu (Terrence Chun)
- Newsgroups: comp.sys.amiga.applications
- Subject: Re: FinalWriter V.401 Fonts?
- Date: 23 Jan 1996 15:02:42 -0700
- Organization: University of Denver, Dept. of Math & Comp. Sci.
- Message-ID: <4e3lu2$jiq@nyx10.cs.du.edu>
- References: <19960117.846EA98.1363A@llewell.us.net> <DLLA4x.D8n@serval.net.wsu.edu> <BjCKIkk.anderson4@delphi.com> <4e1v31$8co@news2.delphi.com>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: nyx10.nyx.net
-
- In article <4e1v31$8co@news2.delphi.com>,
- TAOBERLY@DELPHI.COM <TAOBERLY@news.delphi.com> wrote:
-
- >> Okay, here's a suggesstion for a work-around: create a superscript style,
- >> assign it to whatever function key is handy; create a normal script style,
- >> assign it to _shifted_ function key. now, function key gets you to
- >> superscript; shift function key returns you to normal.
- >
- >But the styles are _paragraph_ styles, and can't be applied to a single
- >word or character without affecting everything else in the paragraph, can
- >they?
-
- I have it set so that the shifted fkey gives me superscript and the
- alt-ed fkey gives subscript ("shift" is above "alt", "alt" is below
- "shift") and the regular fkey gets me back to normal mode. Works within
- the paragraph fine (I think that I have them set to the menu items rather
- than going through the text format requester).
-
- -- Terrence
-
-
-
-