Signe. Thank you for going to the trouble of doing that.

I think that this indicates that it is some setting in Windows 2000. Given that one cannot know what the user's settings are (and that as an application developer one probably shouldn't rely on being able to reconfigure these), and given that different OSs use different keyboard-combo shortcuts to display these characters, I think that I am right to go with my character-to-button palette mapping. I want to have a technique that is easy for the user to use and that is cross-platform and that is independent of any settings on the machine on which my app runs.

It also has the benefit that it can be used for other purposes e.g. for applications where users have key phrases that they need to insert often - these could be placed in the list and then generate a selection palette.

Incidentally, I remember earlier on you seemed to think the palette idea was not the way to go. Was this because you thought it important to protect the screen real-estate or because you knew I would run into technical difficulties on transferring the text between stacks? I think I will eventually get round the final technical difficulty I am having. But if not, I will start to look at ways of putting the list of 'international' character on the card itself.
Hello again Bernard (I thought you were asleep at this hour? Are you in Europe?)

You really got me thinking. First of all, what you say about settings in Windows 2000, I do not think is the case. Will, please, users on other Window platforms chime in and confirm the use of the accented letters in standalones? Or is it the English keyboard which creates the problem, but you do have the two accent keys available?

Only if you are sure the users can not make use of the accent keys, then I would go for a palette or a specific card. The most user friendly way would be to have the users click on an accented letter and let scripting insert it in the text field. But I would use a palette or a card for the rest of "strange" letters, such as c cedille, o+e in French, tilde in Spanish.

If you then want to give the user the possibility to "save" key phrases, I would have made a button "Insert new phrase" or "Insert new accented letter" (on a card). This would open an Ask window in which the user writes what he needs, and then your scripting would add this to the list, or insert a new button or whatever you choose. Now I think this is getting complicated, so I'll stop here.
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1. amanuensis Signe Marie Sanne e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Romansk Institutt tel: +47 55 58 21 27
Oysteins gt. 1 5007 Bergen http://www.hf.uib.no/hfolk/mlab/hjem/default.html
Norway

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