On Wednesday 05 November 2003 6:06 pm, Pulat Yunusov wrote: > On November 5, 2003 05:31 pm, Eugene wrote: > > On Wednesday 05 November 2003 4:29 pm, Pulat Yunusov wrote: > > > On November 5, 2003 02:15 pm, Eugene Nine wrote: > > > > I'm not sure if this is KDE specific or not, I have some old > > > > documents that were written with DOS Edit and have higher ASCII > > > > symbols in them. I'm trying to open them with Kwrite or Kword but > > > > need a Font with the higher ASCII symbols. I seem to remember I > > > > either found one in Windows to do this or edited one myself copying > > > > the symbols from a symbol font over to a regular font but in the > > > > appripriate ASCII values. Is there a font I can use with KDE/Linux > > > > to get these symbols without re editing my docuement? > > > > > > > > Eugene Nine > > > > > > I believe any Latin-1 (ISO-8859-1) font will do the trick because, as > > > far as I know, that encoding includes ASCII and what you refer to as > > > higher ASCII characters. What problem exactly do you have when you open > > > your documents in KWrite or KWord? > > > > > > Pulat > > > http://primedatasolutions.com/ > > > Websites. Databases. Security. > > > > I'm looking for the ones from 128-255 at www.asciitable.com. If you open > > KcharSelect there are 8 rows, with the characters going from 0-255 so the > > bottom 4 rows are the extended 128-255. I've used some of the math > > symbols like 251, 245, 244 159 and the Greek characters like 225, 234, > > etc. I think all those exist in the higher tables of different fonts > > but I have to try and search/replace little squares with the correct > > ones, but If I can find a font that has them in the place already it will > > be easier. I think I either used a terminal font in windows or edited a > > font to make what I need. I've been searching for font editors but > > haven't found much. > > That looks like the IBM ASCII chart and I am not sure if fonts or editors > that ship with KDE support it. You might want to search for a tool that > will convert IBM ASCII (extended) text to Unicode, which definitely has > entities for the characters you're looking for and is the right encoding to > migrate to for the long-term. Once your text is converted, you can edit it > with a modern Unicode editor. > I guess I should have been more specific, you are correct IBM's extended ASCII. That would be ideal if I could convert them. I've tried kwrite, kword, opecoffice but nothing seems to convert properly. You don't know of any programs/scripts to do it do you? I think it would be pretty simple, just look up the ext ascii in a list and replace with the corresponding unicode character, but I haven't learned any unix shell scripting yet. > Pulat > http://primedatasolutions.com/ > Websites. Databases. Security. > > ___________________________________________________ > . > Account management: https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/kde. > Archives: http://lists.kde.org/. > More info: http://www.kde.org/faq.html. ___________________________________________________ . Account management: https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/kde. Archives: http://lists.kde.org/. More info: http://www.kde.org/faq.html.