Discussion:
Overline/overstrike in Onenote
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unknown
2009-09-23 20:48:34 UTC
Permalink
Hello everyone

I've been using Onenote to take notes at school last year, and I'v
loved it so far. As anyone who uses onenote to take notes can probabl
attest to, although onenote can replace/improve on pen and paper in mos
ways, special characters are where it runs into trouble. I've found al
sorts of workarounds, since a lot of symbols can stand in for others
its very easy to manipulate your text, and Onenote's unicode entry i
simple and efficient (for me at least). I've also taken to usin
autohotkey and autocorrect for inserting symbols since I have troubl
remembering all the unicode codes.

The one thing I have not been able to figure out is how to overlin
things (put a line over a letter). I've done a lot of searching, an
while there seem to be ways to do it in almost every microsoft offic
program, Onenote is conspicuously absent from every solution I've found
I know it can be done using the equation entry in Word, but I can't see
to paste characters using this (they show up as boxes with ?'s in them)
and it's not really workable if you're trying to keep up with notes i
an econ lecture.

So are there any better ways to do this? A native, hotkey based
overlining in Onenote would be lovely, but I strongly doubt anythin
like this exists based on what I've seen so far.

Thanks in advanc

--
wstrinz
David Olsen
2009-09-23 22:38:55 UTC
Permalink
What about the Strikethrough feature?
Ctrl+D, apply text effects, enable Strikethrough.
--
David Olsen
www.powerbits.com.au
Post by unknown
Hello everyone
I've been using Onenote to take notes at school last year, and I've
loved it so far. As anyone who uses onenote to take notes can probably
attest to, although onenote can replace/improve on pen and paper in most
ways, special characters are where it runs into trouble. I've found all
sorts of workarounds, since a lot of symbols can stand in for others,
its very easy to manipulate your text, and Onenote's unicode entry is
simple and efficient (for me at least). I've also taken to using
autohotkey and autocorrect for inserting symbols since I have trouble
remembering all the unicode codes.
The one thing I have not been able to figure out is how to overline
things (put a line over a letter). I've done a lot of searching, and
while there seem to be ways to do it in almost every microsoft office
program, Onenote is conspicuously absent from every solution I've found.
I know it can be done using the equation entry in Word, but I can't seem
to paste characters using this (they show up as boxes with ?'s in them),
and it's not really workable if you're trying to keep up with notes in
an econ lecture.
So are there any better ways to do this? A native, hotkey based,
overlining in Onenote would be lovely, but I strongly doubt anything
like this exists based on what I've seen so far.
Thanks in advance
--
wstrinz
unknown
2009-09-23 23:15:03 UTC
Permalink
It's not exactly what I was looking for, but thanks for the suggestion
I'll probably wind up doing that until/unless I find a way to do rea
overlines

--
wstrinz
Rainald Taesler
2009-09-26 20:21:43 UTC
Permalink
Post by unknown
It's not exactly what I was looking for, but thanks for the
suggestion. I'll probably wind up doing that until/unless I find a
way to do real overlines.
You'll just have to wait a bit.
In the upcoming version ON2010 (which will be released as a part of
Office 2010 in the first half of next year) there will be a really fine
formula editor.

Rainald
m***@gmail.com
2015-12-12 15:48:33 UTC
Permalink
Post by Rainald Taesler
Post by unknown
It's not exactly what I was looking for, but thanks for the
suggestion. I'll probably wind up doing that until/unless I find a
way to do real overlines.
You'll just have to wait a bit.
In the upcoming version ON2010 (which will be released as a part of
Office 2010 in the first half of next year) there will be a really fine
formula editor.
Rainald
Rainald, still not quite what I want, i just need do right the notation for X average, so a i just need to right X and overline it.
There is a way?
g***@gmail.com
2017-09-19 08:47:58 UTC
Permalink
Post by m***@gmail.com
Post by Rainald Taesler
Post by unknown
It's not exactly what I was looking for, but thanks for the
suggestion. I'll probably wind up doing that until/unless I find a
way to do real overlines.
You'll just have to wait a bit.
In the upcoming version ON2010 (which will be released as a part of
Office 2010 in the first half of next year) there will be a really fine
formula editor.
Rainald
Rainald, still not quite what I want, i just need do right the notation for X average, so a i just need to right X and overline it.
There is a way?
The solution is to write "\overline X". Just type what you want to have ovelined after writing \overline.
j***@gmail.com
2014-05-30 22:27:27 UTC
Permalink
Insert the symbol with character code '0305'. It's a "Combining Overline" and should do what you want to the next letter you type. Repeat for each letter you want to have an overline.
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