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Abigail
June 10th, 2004, 02:06 PM
Hi,

I have a document title that has the character =AE in=20
superscript format. I have then inserted this title as=20
fields throughout my long document. I face two problems:

1. The inserted field does not take the superscript format=20
of =AE, and instead makes it regular sized. To workaround=20
this, I manually replaced all the occurances of =AE to=20
superscript.

2. However, even after doing that, when i convert the=20
document to pdf, the result i get is a regular sized =AE=20
with a capital P on either side. It looks like this:
P=AEP

If any of you have faced this problem, i would truly=20
appreciate your inputs.

TIA,

Abigail

Larry Randall
June 10th, 2004, 11:33 PM
Use [ALT]0153 to input a trademark symbol, and [ALT]0174 to
produce a registered trademark symbol. Other symbols may
be produced with [ALT]<character code>. This will input
the correct superscripted character without using superscript.=20

Larry Randall
Certified Word Expert


>-----Original Message-----
>Hi,
>
>I have a document title that has the character =AE in=20
>superscript format. I have then inserted this title as=20
>fields throughout my long document. I face two problems:
>
>1. The inserted field does not take the superscript format=20
>of =AE, and instead makes it regular sized. To workaround=20
>this, I manually replaced all the occurances of =AE to=20
>superscript.
>
>2. However, even after doing that, when i convert the=20
>document to pdf, the result i get is a regular sized =AE=20
>with a capital P on either side. It looks like this:
>P=AEP
>
>If any of you have faced this problem, i would truly=20
>appreciate your inputs.
>
>TIA,
>
>Abigail
>.
>

Suzanne S. Barnhill
June 10th, 2004, 11:53 PM
I think you'll find that the symbol Abigail used in her post *is* character
0174 (or 00AE Unicode). Many users prefer it even more inconspicuous,
especially if applied to display-size type.

--
Suzanne S. Barnhill
Microsoft MVP (Word)
Words into Type
Fairhope, Alabama USA
Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org
Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so
all may benefit.

"Larry Randall" > wrote in message
...
Use [ALT]0153 to input a trademark symbol, and [ALT]0174 to
produce a registered trademark symbol. Other symbols may
be produced with [ALT]<character code>. This will input
the correct superscripted character without using superscript.

Larry Randall
Certified Word Expert


>-----Original Message-----
>Hi,
>
>I have a document title that has the character ® in
>superscript format. I have then inserted this title as
>fields throughout my long document. I face two problems:
>
>1. The inserted field does not take the superscript format
>of ®, and instead makes it regular sized. To workaround
>this, I manually replaced all the occurances of ® to
>superscript.
>
>2. However, even after doing that, when i convert the
>document to pdf, the result i get is a regular sized ®
>with a capital P on either side. It looks like this:
>P®P
>
>If any of you have faced this problem, i would truly
>appreciate your inputs.
>
>TIA,
>
>Abigail
>.
>

Klaus Linke
June 13th, 2004, 11:41 PM
"Suzanne S. Barnhill" > wrote:
> I think you'll find that the symbol Abigail used in her post *is*
character
> 0174 (or 00AE Unicode). Many users prefer it even more inconspicuous,
> especially if applied to display-size type.

And it looks small & supersctipted in some fonts, and large & not
superscripted in others.

I'd try to live with the decision made by the font designer.

Re why superscript formatting is lost when converting to PDF, I have no
idea.
As a work-around, you could try if choosing a smaller font size and raising
the symbol with "Format > Font > Character spacing" works.

Greetings,
Klaus

Robert M. Franz
June 14th, 2004, 12:40 PM
Hi Klaus

Klaus Linke wrote:
[..]
> And it looks small & supersctipted in some fonts, and large & not
> superscripted in others.
>
> I'd try to live with the decision made by the font designer.
>
> Re why superscript formatting is lost when converting to PDF, I have no
> idea.

A font substitution during the process might as well be the candidate here.

2cents
..bob
--
/"\ ASCII Ribbon Campaign | MS
\ / | MVP
X Against HTML | for
/ \ in e-mail & news | Word

Klaus Linke
June 14th, 2004, 03:31 PM
Hi Bob,

> > Re why superscript formatting is lost when converting to PDF,
> > I have no idea.

> A font substitution during the process might as well be the candidate
here.

What confuses me is that it turns into P®P. I don't know enough about
PostScript to guess where the "P"s are coming from, but I don't think from
Word. Looks more like a bug in the Adobe "printer" driver for PDFs.

Greetings,
Klaus

Robert M. Franz
June 15th, 2004, 02:12 PM
Hi Klaus

Klaus Linke wrote:
[..]
> What confuses me is that it turns into P®P. I don't know enough about
> PostScript to guess where the "P"s are coming from, but I don't think from
> Word. Looks more like a bug in the Adobe "printer" driver for PDFs.

I'd take it to comp.text.pdf or a PS related group. Just in case the OP
is still lurking ... ;-)

Greetinx
..bob
--
/"\ ASCII Ribbon Campaign | MS
\ / | MVP
X Against HTML | for
/ \ in e-mail & news | Word

Tim Murray
June 18th, 2004, 04:12 PM
On Mon, 14 Jun 2004 10:31:20 -0400, Klaus Linke wrote
(in article >):

> What confuses me is that it turns into P®P. I don't know enough about
> PostScript to guess where the "P"s are coming from, but I don't think from
> Word. Looks more like a bug in the Adobe "printer" driver for PDFs.

What font are you using?

Abigail
June 23rd, 2004, 10:23 AM
Hi,

I'm using Arial font. As mentioned in my initial post, the problem seems to be due to a combination of two factors, the styleref field that I am using and the ® character.

Still haven't found any solution. As a temporary workaround I am de-linking all the fields and manually making the ® superscript, which gives me the intended result for the time-being. However, I'm going the purpose for which the fields are used is lost, as I will have to do a lot of manual work for future releases.

Hope one of you can help me out.

Thanks and regards,
Abigail

"Tim Murray" wrote:

> On Mon, 14 Jun 2004 10:31:20 -0400, Klaus Linke wrote
> (in article >):
>
> > What confuses me is that it turns into P®P. I don't know enough about
> > PostScript to guess where the "P"s are coming from, but I don't think from
> > Word. Looks more like a bug in the Adobe "printer" driver for PDFs.
>
> What font are you using?
>
>

Tim Murray
June 27th, 2004, 02:10 AM
> I have a document title that has the character ® in
> superscript format. I have then inserted this title as
> fields throughout my long document. I face two problems:

I don't think this was ever addressed: What happens if you do NOT use a
field; if you just type it into regular text?

Also, how are you creating your PDF?

Tim Murray
June 27th, 2004, 02:14 AM
> I have a document title that has the character ® in
> superscript format. I have then inserted this title as
> fields throughout my long document. I face two problems:

And one other thing: How did you construct the field?

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