uneMule Posted June 26, 2021 Posted June 26, 2021 Bonjour à tous. L'article de menu texte[Activer/Desactiver Unicode] Alt U donne le sentiment qu'il s'agit d'une bascule. C'est en fonction ou pas. Mais pas du tout. En fait cette commande permet de valider le code du caractère en fin de saisie. ***** Hello everyone. The menu item texte[Activer/Desactiver Unicode] Alt U gives the feeling that it is a toggle. It is on or off. But not at all. In fact this command validates the character code at the end of the input. Publisher 1.9.2.10.35 and 1.10.0.1098 Quote Toujours pas !Windows 10 Pro 21H2 - Intel Core i7-3630QM CPU @ 2.40GHz - 16 Gb Ram - GeForce GT 650M - Intel HD 4000 Affinity Photo | Affinity Designer | Affinity Publisher | 2
Old Bruce Posted June 26, 2021 Posted June 26, 2021 4 minutes ago, uneMule said: Bonjour à tous. L'article de menu texte[Activer/Desactiver Unicode] Alt U donne le sentiment qu'il s'agit d'une bascule. C'est en fonction ou pas. Mais pas du tout. En fait cette commande permet de valider le code du caractère en fin de saisie. ***** Hello everyone. The menu item texte[Activer/Desactiver Unicode] Alt U gives the feeling that it is a toggle. It is on or off. But not at all. In fact this command validates the character code at the end of the input. Publisher 1.9.2.10.35 and 1.10.0.1098 Il s'agit d'une bascule, vous devez sélectionner le remplacement unicode. Si vous commencez par la lettre sélectionnée, vous pouvez alterner entre les deux. It is a toggle, you have to select the unicode replacement. If you start with the letter selected your can toggle back and forth. Quote Mac Pro (Late 2013) Mac OS 12.7.6 Affinity Designer 2.6.0 | Affinity Photo 2.6.0 | Affinity Publisher 2.6.0 | Beta versions as they appear. I have never mastered color management, period, so I cannot help with that.
uneMule Posted June 26, 2021 Author Posted June 26, 2021 @Old Bruce En fait, mon commentaire vient de mon utilisation qui est de rentrer le code et le valider avec alt-u pour obtenir le caractère. Mais, ce n'est pas le cas et je suis d'accord avec vous sur le côté affichage code/caractère. C'est une bascule, qui finalement ressemble à "Afficher les caractères spéciaux" dans le menu texte. Donc, "Activer/Désactiver" est inadéquat et peut être remplacer par "Afficher...". Vu que c'est ce qui se passe ! ***** Actually, my comment comes from my use of entering the code and validating it with alt-u to get the character. In fact, this is not the case and I agree with you on the code/character display side. It's a toggle, which ultimately looks like "Show special characters" in the text menu. So "Enable/Disable" is inadequate and can be replaced by "Show...". Since that's what's happening! Quote Toujours pas !Windows 10 Pro 21H2 - Intel Core i7-3630QM CPU @ 2.40GHz - 16 Gb Ram - GeForce GT 650M - Intel HD 4000 Affinity Photo | Affinity Designer | Affinity Publisher | 2
walt.farrell Posted June 26, 2021 Posted June 26, 2021 No, it is not like "Show..." options that are toggles. It is an immediate action with two possibilities: If the selected text (or the character before the text cursor, when no text is selected) is not showing the Unicode representation, show the Unicode representation. If the selected text (or character before the text cursor) is showing the Unicode representation, show the normal representation. If it were like the usual "Show..." option/toggle then when it was on it would apply automatically as you move the text cursor from one location to another. But it does not do that. If you use Alt+U to show the Unicode value for some character, and move the cursor waay to a different character: The first characterr still shows its Unicode value. The new character does not show the Unicode value. To see its Unicode value, you must use Ctrl+U again. And now you have two characters showing their Unicode values. At that point, if you use Alt+U again, only the second character's value changes. The first still has the Unicode value. This function acts like the Text > Capitalization menu function when you use the items below the dividing line: Those items actually modify and transform the text, as an immediate action when you choose them. Alt+U does the same thing. If you had a space character " " and used Alt+U on it you now have U+0020 showing on the screen, and you actually have "U+0020" in your text rather than the " " that you had before you used Alt+U. Quote -- Walt Designer, Photo, and Publisher V1 and V2 at latest retail and beta releases PC: Desktop: Windows 11 Pro 23H2, 64GB memory, AMD Ryzen 9 5900 12-Core @ 3.00 GHz, NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3090 Laptop: Windows 11 Pro 23H2, 32GB memory, Intel Core i7-10750H @ 2.60GHz, Intel UHD Graphics Comet Lake GT2 and NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3070 Laptop GPU. Laptop 2: Windows 11 Pro 24H2, 16GB memory, Snapdragon(R) X Elite - X1E80100 - Qualcomm(R) Oryon(TM) 12 Core CPU 4.01 GHz, Qualcomm(R) Adreno(TM) X1-85 GPU iPad: iPad Pro M1, 12.9": iPadOS 18.5, Apple Pencil 2, Magic Keyboard Mac: 2023 M2 MacBook Air 15", 16GB memory, macOS Sequoia 15.5
uneMule Posted June 26, 2021 Author Posted June 26, 2021 39 minutes ago, walt.farrell said: This function acts like the Text > Capitalization menu function when you use the items below the dividing line: Hello. Yes, indeed, the menu item is called "Majuscules" and it includes "Minuscules". Among others. I remember windows and "turn off" in the "start" menu.😉 *** I should have finished my sentence "afficher code/caractère" ou "convertir code/caractère" if you prefer. And if I dare, when special characters are displayed, the menu proposes "Afficher les caractères spéciaux". Amazing, isn't it! Quote Toujours pas !Windows 10 Pro 21H2 - Intel Core i7-3630QM CPU @ 2.40GHz - 16 Gb Ram - GeForce GT 650M - Intel HD 4000 Affinity Photo | Affinity Designer | Affinity Publisher | 2
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