In Sweden we have åäö, ÅÄÖ - Post ID...

User 2051734 Photo


Registered User
1 post

Hi!
In Sweden/Norden we have the letters åäö, ÅÄÖ why dosen't you change that when you write/type in your program, so when you write it's already fixed.What's the CLUE...
Kind Regards
Peter Alsing
x@alsing.com
User 187934 Photo


Senior Advisor
20,239 posts

Hi Mora-Nisse,
Do these work?
https://tools.oratory.com/altcodes.html
I can't hear what I'm looking at.
It's easy to overlook something you're not looking for.

This is a site I built for my work.(RSD)
http://esmansgreenhouse.com
This is a site I built for use in my job.(HTML Editor)
https://pestlogbook.com
This is my personal site used for testing and as an easy way to share photos.(RLM imported to RSD)
https://ericrohloff.com
User 379556 Photo


Registered User
1,558 posts

The characters with umlout/dieresis are already included in the HTML Editor under the Characters tab at the left (in the 'Latin Accent Characters' Category). Double-clicking on them inserts them into the HTML file.

Even easier would be to make a Snippet* out of each of the characters using the Entity Names as shown here. One then can double-click on the selected snippet whenever the character is to be inserted in the text.

For speedy entry in longer pieces of text I would be inclined to insert repeated other keyboard characters (e.g. ~~ ## ^^ @@) in place of the characters wanted, and then use HTML Editor's Find and Replace facility to replace those repeated keyboard characters with the Entity Names.

Frank

*Originally creating a Snippet is simply a matter of selecting the character on the main screen of HTML Editor, right-clicking with the mouse on that selected item, and choosing 'Save Selected Text as Snippet'.
User 122279 Photo


Senior Advisor
14,547 posts
Online Now

The Scadinavian and German characters work fine in the Editor, but some web servers don't seem to like them. Therefore I still have to use å ø ß and such.

PS: I thought Mora-Nisse was a skier, not a web designer?? :D
Ha en riktig god dag!
Inger, Norway

My work in progress:
Components for Site Designer and the HTML Editor: https://mock-up.coffeecup.com


User 2823313 Photo


Registered User
3 posts

Inger, what do you mean when you say that some web servers don't seem to like umlauts? I thought that Unicode was standard today.
User 122279 Photo


Senior Advisor
14,547 posts
Online Now

I thought so too, really, but according to my experience, it seems not to be so. All that I can say is, that some servers display something 'rude' if a page has some Nordic or German chatacters, or even French or Spanish ones, like è, ñ etc.
Ha en riktig god dag!
Inger, Norway

My work in progress:
Components for Site Designer and the HTML Editor: https://mock-up.coffeecup.com



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