You're viewing a single thread.
This but for em dashes
31 0 ReplyMany applications will automatically convert two hyphens to an em dash.
--
13 0 ReplyNot my copy of Microsoft Word I was given by work, I can say that much.
3 0 ReplySo just make a text replacement. I actually prefer it this way so I can always get the character I want. I have it set up such that
\emdash and \endash are replaced by the appropriate characters. I’ve also recently gotten into \hairsp\emdash\hairsp for all my em dash needs.
I also set up my phone to replace a ? and ! directly next to each other in both orders with a ‽
It’s great fun if you care about minute details such as these
4 0 ReplyBootleg Office 95?
2 0 Reply
That’s an en dash. This is an em dash: —
2 0 ReplyYes, I know. I was A) demonstrating what I was talking about, and B) seeing if it would work here (it doesn't).
2 0 Reply
Nice, didn't know that; it works in Telegram.
1 0 Reply
Alt+0150
10 0 ReplyThat's actually the alt code for an en dash. Em dash is Alt+0151!
9 0 ReplyThis should be a lot more upvoted.
1 0 Reply
I just use hyphens for everything.
2 0 ReplyI use a compose key. I type Compose - - -
2 0 ReplyFor me it's "§"
Easy on Android. PITA and different shortcut on every Windows app.
2 0 Reply@Stovetop gets it; Alt 0151 — love the em dash!
1 0 Reply