I try not to use degrees at all because there is no degrees symbol on my keyboard, which is a pain in the ass. I guess I could spell out "degrees" but that is a pain in the ass, too. So I use radians and Kelvins as a work-around.
And if anybody tries to "correct" me to say "degrees Kelvin," I just smirk and say "look it up.";-)
-- [Sir Garlon] is the marvellest knight who is now living, for he destroyeth many good knights, for he goeth invisible.
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(Score: 1) by unauthorized on Saturday March 15 2014, @05:51AM
You can always directly input unicode hexcodes. The code for Ëš is 2DA. On Windows you press "ALT +(hexcode)", on most GTK software it's "CTRL-ALT-U (hexcode)". Sadly X doesn't support global unicode input out of the box, but as all things Linux there are about 5+e9 different ways to do it. No idea for OSX through.
Except that you shouldn't use the full unit symbols for temperatures; they're "compatibility characters" and exist only to support round-tripping with certain CJK encodings (that is to say, so you can convert a text from EUC-JP to Unicode and back to EUC-JP, and have the same text). When composing a text in Unicode which is not required to be compatible with a specific text encoded in a different character set, you should always use the two separate symbols.
You can always directly input unicode hexcodes. The code for Ëš is 2DA. On Windows you press "ALT +(hexcode)", on most GTK software it's "CTRL-ALT-U (hexcode)". Sadly X doesn't support global unicode input out of the box, but as all things Linux there are about 5+e9 different ways to do it. No idea for OSX through.
Best way to go about it with X is to replace a seldom-used key with the Compose key [wikipedia.org]. Degrees is, for example, a three key sequence: compose, o, o. It also gives easy access to accents and other symbols that one might need occasionally, such as foreign currencies. Euro is "compose, e, =" as another example.
You can also add custom ones in your own compose file, too. I added a couple shortcuts for things like an infinity symbol.
(Score: 2) by Sir Garlon on Friday March 14 2014, @04:32PM
I try not to use degrees at all because there is no degrees symbol on my keyboard, which is a pain in the ass. I guess I could spell out "degrees" but that is a pain in the ass, too. So I use radians and Kelvins as a work-around.
And if anybody tries to "correct" me to say "degrees Kelvin," I just smirk and say "look it up." ;-)
[Sir Garlon] is the marvellest knight who is now living, for he destroyeth many good knights, for he goeth invisible.
(Score: 1) by unauthorized on Saturday March 15 2014, @05:51AM
You can always directly input unicode hexcodes. The code for Ëš is 2DA. On Windows you press "ALT +(hexcode)", on most GTK software it's "CTRL-ALT-U (hexcode)". Sadly X doesn't support global unicode input out of the box, but as all things Linux there are about 5+e9 different ways to do it. No idea for OSX through.
(Score: 1) by unauthorized on Saturday March 15 2014, @05:56AM
Well, you could do it, but only on sites which actually support UTF-8.
(Score: 2) by maxwell demon on Saturday March 15 2014, @03:27PM
Of course you can always do it as HTML entity: ˚ gives ˚
Of course if you use Unicode anyway, you can also use the full unit symbol for temperatures: ℃ gives ℃ and ℉ gives ℉
The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
(Score: 1) by zsau on Tuesday March 18 2014, @12:21AM
Except that you shouldn't use the full unit symbols for temperatures; they're "compatibility characters" and exist only to support round-tripping with certain CJK encodings (that is to say, so you can convert a text from EUC-JP to Unicode and back to EUC-JP, and have the same text). When composing a text in Unicode which is not required to be compatible with a specific text encoded in a different character set, you should always use the two separate symbols.
(Score: 2) by Marand on Thursday March 20 2014, @02:27AM
Best way to go about it with X is to replace a seldom-used key with the Compose key [wikipedia.org]. Degrees is, for example, a three key sequence: compose, o, o. It also gives easy access to accents and other symbols that one might need occasionally, such as foreign currencies. Euro is "compose, e, =" as another example.
You can also add custom ones in your own compose file, too. I added a couple shortcuts for things like an infinity symbol.
(Score: 1) by SockPuppet on Saturday March 15 2014, @03:58PM
Where do you buy keyboards with a Pi key?
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday March 16 2014, @06:30AM
Greece?