> All of the ASCII extended characters can be found at numerous sites. Here is > one: > > http://www.evergreen.edu/biophysics/technotes/program/ascii_ext-pc.htm It's probably worth mentioning at this point (since the page mentioned above gets into HTML characters) that if you're putting your work on the Internet, you have a better chance of special characters being visible using "character entities" than if you enter them directly. (Unless you're doing long passages in a non-Roman alphabet, which is a whole other issue.) I'm particularly fond of <http://evolt.org/entities> as a simple quick reference to this information. You may view it in your browser to see if the character entity you want to use is supported (in some cases, the numeric code is more likely to be visible). Some special characters require you to get into other character sets - e.g., Polish uses ISO 8859-2 - but the evolt page covers quite a bit. Hope this was useful for someone... :-) -- Bob Sullivan Schenectady Digital History Archive <http://www.schenectadyhistory.org/> Schenectady County (NY) Public Library