Group:  Microsoft Word ยป microsoft.public.word.international.features
Thread: Getting rid of a weird character

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Getting rid of a weird character
Fishy <<*(((><[ at ]drift.net> 12/30/2008 5:24:27 AM
I'm working on some Japanese text that has been transliterated into English. What I
received has a chracter that looks like a hyphen with a downward stroke at the end. I
believe it is a non-printing character. I can find it in my character map and insert one,
but I cannot copy and paste it into the find/replace box. I want to delete all these
characters. I believe they represent an accent mark, which is not needed in Japanese
Romanji.

Perhaps the hyphen with the downward stroke at the end is used to represent some kind of a
non-printing chracter. Like the pilcrow, I can keyboard it in. Like the pilcrow, I
cannot do a find/replace. There must be a way!

I'm using Word XP.
Re: Getting rid of a weird character
"Mihai N." <nmihai_year_2000[ at ]yahoo.com> 12/30/2008 6:26:25 AM

[Quoted Text]
> I can find it in my character map and insert one,
> but I cannot copy and paste it into the find/replace box.

If you find it in the character map, what is the Unicode value?
(so that we know what you have there)


--
Mihai Nita [Microsoft MVP, Visual C++]
http://www.mihai-nita.net
------------------------------------------
Replace _year_ with _ to get the real email
Re: Getting rid of a weird character
"PamC via OfficeKB.com" <u43222[ at ]uwe> 12/31/2008 3:31:21 AM
Sounds like an optional hyphen. With formatting characters showing, place
cursor in the middle of a line of type and press ctrl+- (hyphen). Is that
what you see? Now, if you put cursor immediately to the right of a character
and press Alt+x, Word will return a hexadecimal number for that character.
But Word does not do that for its formatting characters.
To get rid of optional hyphens, find ^- and replace it with nothing.

If the character you want to get rid of is not the optional hyphen, get the
character's hexadecimal value (Alt+x) . Convert the hex number to the
equivalent decimal number (I use the Windows calculator). Then search for
^unnnn (where nnnn is the decimal number) and replace it with nothing.


PamC




Fishy <<*(((> wrote:
[Quoted Text]
>I'm working on some Japanese text that has been transliterated into English. What I
>received has a character that looks like a hyphen with a downward stroke at the end. I
>believe it is a non-printing character. I can find it in my character map and insert one,
>but I cannot copy and paste it into the find/replace box. I want to delete all these
>characters. I believe they represent an accent mark, which is not needed in Japanese
>Romanji.
>
>Perhaps the hyphen with the downward stroke at the end is used to represent some kind of a
>non-printing chracter. Like the pilcrow, I can keyboard it in. Like the pilcrow, I
>cannot do a find/replace. There must be a way!
>
>I'm using Word XP.

--
Message posted via OfficeKB.com
http://www.officekb.com/Uwe/Forums.aspx/ms-word-general/200812/1

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