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  2. The actual (alt+X) codes didn't work, so I went into Symbols (using MS Word), used the Unicode (211A) to find squareRoot, and then added a shortcut to the symbol for easy access. I used (CTRL+{). Share

  3. To insert the square root symbol in word, just follow the steps below: Place the insertion pointer at where you want to insert the symbol. Press Alt+= on your keyboard. These hotkeys will show the equation field. Now type \sqrt inside the equation field, then hit the spacebar. Word will convert the text (\sqrt) into a square root symbol.

  4. If I understand your question correctly, you should be able to achieve a square root symbol by typing any of the following into your HTML: "√", "√", or "√" (quote marks for clarity, they aren't part of the entity you enter).

  5. How can we type mathematical symbols like square-root, omega, integration, differentiation etc in gmail.

  6. Sorry if my question is too noobish, but I can't get the square root symbol in my desktop pc using ALT + 251. When I type that key combination, it gives me ¹ instead. I have searched the internet, but I can't find any solution. Probably relevant: I live in Colombia and just purchased this low budget second hand desktop.

  7. EDIT: How to get rid of the square? Click on the square to select it and type a space. There doesn't seem to be an option in Word's equation editor to have only a leading superscript - you have to have both a super- and subscript and then make one invisible. For trailing super- and subscripts, all options are available. Here are the available ...

  8. The symbol you have there is a square root instead of a checkmark. That's probably okay for many people ...

  9. Unfortunately I don't see any keyboard shortcuts in modern OneNote ("for Windows 10", even though I'm on Win11). You can type out a variety of shorthands (like \cbrt for cube-root) but hovering over the equivalent button on the Insert menu dropdown just shows the name of the radical, not the shortcut. –

  10. I'd like to be able to use a keyboard shortcut to type special characters (characters that can't be found on my keyboard) such as the £ (pound) symbol, which I can get on a keyboard with a number pad by typing Alt+0163. Unfortunately, on my netbook, I don't have a number pad.

  11. It can display ₐ₊₋ but some other subscripts (like ₂ₙ) are converted to squares. When I copy that square and paste on here the problem disappears: ₂. Why is that? The file is encoded in UTF-8. FYI: