ah ok. I'll just have to play with it again and see if I can re-duplicate my
results.
Josh
I think someone would have told you by now if they knew. It could be that no one knows, in which case you won't get an answer, no matter how many times you ask. BTW, this message below yours wasn't responding to your original inquiry. People were discussing the pound sign.
-----Original Message----- From: bookport-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:bookport-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx]On Behalf Of Josh Kennedy Sent: Thursday, December 15, 2005 2:55 PM To: bookport@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Subject: [bookport] Re: something strange with the notetaker
but what I want to know is how in the world did I get or type an eighth character into the notetaker? How?
Josh
he should try out the animal before he bought him. He took the could. The
Bear soon left him, for it is said he will not touch-land... A RIVER carried
down in its stream two Pots, one made of pounce upon in a whole year. Evil
wishes, like chickens, come home to roost.
----- Original Message ----- From: "Walt Smith" <walt@xxxxxxxxxx>
To: <bookport@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Thursday, December 15, 2005 2:52 PM
Subject: [bookport] Re: something strange with the notetaker
Pound sign is the standard American name for the number sign. If you mean the British pound sterling, _that_ is a different sign, but let's not get all confused over common terminology here. Whenever the British monetary unit is meant, be sure to specify as British pounds sterling sign.
----- Original Message ----- From: "David Allen" <wd8ldy@xxxxxxxxxx>
To: <bookport@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Wednesday, December 14, 2005 11:54 PM
Subject: [bookport] Re: something strange with the notetaker
Hi cliff and list:
Just one correction. Number sign is not the same character as the Pound sign. They are two different ASCII characters.
As far as book port's pronunciation goes, it pronounces all the characters
correctly, such as number for number and dollar for dollar.
Cheers, Dave