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From: | Stefan Thomas |
Subject: | Re: which encoding for umlaute |
Date: | Tue, 22 Dec 2009 11:07:31 +0100 |
alternatively you can look up the table here:
http://www.utf8-chartable.de/
and then manually put in the value using the '\char ##' function.
For example
\header {
title = \markup {\concat {"Bourr" \char ##x009 "e"} }
}
Which gives Bourrée with an e-acute (x009). The \concat switch means that 'Bourrée' doesn't end up as 'Bourr é e'.
I use this method because I don't have a lot of accented characters to deal with and also I can move my ly files into virtually any plaintext editor without worrying about any weird conversions that a different OS or editor will do.
James
-----Original Message-----
From: lilypond-user-bounces+james.lowe=datacore.com@gnu.org on behalf of Stefan Thomas
Sent: Sat 19/12/2009 19:39
To: lilypond-user
Subject: which encoding for umlaute
Dear community,
which encoding do I have to choose, to get the german "Umlaute" (like ä, ö,
etc.) properly shown on a windows-machine?
umlauttest.png
Description: PNG image
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