On Tue, 15 Feb 2005, FISCHER, Matthew wrote:

   Thanks for your speedy reply,  I should have noted
that I'm using a Linux machine.  However, when I copy
the symbol from Windows to Linux (using R/emacs) via an x-win 32 window
it replaces the per mille symbol with a /211.

\211 I hope. (That is octal for 137.)

R then produces the character (not a per mille symbol!)
that can be found in the equivalent place
using character.table() in the Hmisc package.  I'd use
windows, except we have huge output datasets generated
by a climate model, and its not possible to move it to a machine
running windows.

Any other suggestions are welcome!,

Note that this is not as you claimed an ASCII symbol and it is not even an ISO Latin-1 symbol. The area 128 to 143 is a control area in almost all encodings except WinAnsi, which is what you are using on Windows, I believe.


Try `man ascii' on your Linux system.

per mille is not AFAICS in the Adobe symbol font that plotmath uses, and so it cannot be added there. In any case, it is text-like, not a symbol (you would want it in the same font as %).

It is the Unicode character U+2030, so you will be able to use it in a UTF-8 locale in R-2.1.0 via \u2030.


-----Original Message-----
From: Eric Lecoutre [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, 15 February 2005 18:54
To: FISCHER, Matthew; 'r-help@stat.math.ethz.ch'
Subject: Re: [R] special symobol / character



Hi Matthew,

Most systems allow to enter any ASCII (or extended ASCII) character
directly using a key combination.
Accessing ANSI charcaters under Windows is possible with:
ALT+0xxx (press ALT, hold it down, press 0 and the number of the character,
release ALT)
Thus: ALT+0137 makes: ?
The future seems promising with the Unicode support: kudo R core team!

Eric


At 08:23 15/02/2005, FISCHER, Matthew wrote:

Hi all,

    Is it possible to add a permil (or per mille) symbol to
an R plot (I couldn't find this symbol under demo(Hershey) or
the plotmath information).

In some ascii tables it is symbol no. 137.


--
Brian D. Ripley,                  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Professor of Applied Statistics,  http://www.stats.ox.ac.uk/~ripley/
University of Oxford,             Tel:  +44 1865 272861 (self)
1 South Parks Road,                     +44 1865 272866 (PA)
Oxford OX1 3TG, UK                Fax:  +44 1865 272595

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