Re: Need graphic of "Registered" (Circle R)

by "Cindy Stanley" <stanleysupport(at)prodigy.net>

 Date:  Wed, 21 Jul 1999 14:10:45 -0400
 To:  <hwg-graphics(at)hwg.org>
 Cc:  "Fran Johnston" <johnstof(at)powerware.com>
  todo: View Thread, Original
The ISO-Latin-1 numeric entity of &#174; (which will produce the
"registered trademark" symbol for html pages) is fully supported by all
current browsers and most older browsers. I believe Mike is speaking of
the "TM" character/numeric entity of &trade; or &#8482;  But, if you
check the archives, it was spoken of using an "unused" numeric entity
that seemed to resolve this issue. (Can't remember what the numeric
entity was).
--
Cindy K. Stanley

From: Mike Eovino <meovino(at)erols.com>
>You may want to check that in a few different browsers.  I forget
whether
>it's the circle R, C or the superscript TM, but the &...; code for one
of
>them doesn't appear correctly in some browsers.


>From: elizabyth burtis-lopez <elizabyth(at)earthlink.net>
>>If this is for a web page you can simply type &reg; in your code. This
>>will give you the registered trademark too.


>>Cindy Stanley wrote:
>>> If you have a graphics editor, something like PSP, you can simply
use
>>> the text tool, and type the following to get a registered trademark:
>>> alt0174 (all at the same time)

>>> From: Fran Johnston <johnstof(at)powerware.com>
>>> :Does anyone know of a font that contains the "circle R" meaning
>>> "registered"?
>>> :Or does anyone have a graphic already done of the "circle R"?

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