Fixing the "& nu ;" Ambiguity Problem

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AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on the ambiguity caused by the escape coding "& nu ;," which appears as a lowercase "v," complicating mathematical expressions involving velocity and frequency. Users suggest alternatives like using the smilie "[ nu ]" or the Times New Roman font for clearer representation. The Times New Roman font is recommended for Greek letters, with instructions on how to format text using it. Additionally, the Symbol font is mentioned as an option, but its universality is questioned due to inconsistencies in appearance. Overall, the conversation highlights the need for better font representation in mathematical contexts.
quartodeciman
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please, a "new" nu!

I suppose I should be complaining to the vBulletin folks!

The glyph for the escape coding "& nu ;" (scrunched together!) is just a lower case v. If I am writing math expressions with both an ordinary velocity and a frequency term, this makes for ambiguity.

I guess I can use smilie "[ nu ]" (scrunched together!), but these tend to appear above the text line.

TFYP!

a "& nu ;" and a "v":
abcνdef...stuvwxyz
---> -------->

a smilie "nu":
abc[nu]def
--->
 
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Nah, you need to complain to the people who created the fonts.

The times new roman font is easily the best font for greek letters. To use it, type

<font=times new roman> text </font>

but use square brackets [] instead of angle brackets <>

Rewriting your post encapslated in this font tag will yield:


I suppose I should be complaining to the vBulletin folks!

The glyph for the escape coding "& nu ;" (scrunched together!) is just a lower case v. If I am writing math expressions with both an ordinary velocity and a frequency term, this makes for ambiguity.

I guess I can use smilie "[ nu ]" (scrunched together!), but these tend to appear above the text line.

TFYP!

a "& nu ;" and a "v":
abc&nu;def...stuvwxyz
---> -------->

a smilie "nu":
abc[nu]def
--->


If this is too small, then also wrap it in <size=3> </size> tags.
 
Hmm!

&nu;'/&nu; = (c + v).5/(c - v).5

Gee! That's neat!

TFYH!
 
You can also use the "symbol" font.

<font=symbol>n</font>

again, with [] instead of <>.

You'll get: n
 
Oh, yes! I couldn't remember that font name. That has all kinds of good stuff, including cards pips: §¨©ª, very useful when discussing probability examples.
 
Unfortunately, the symbol font is a little less universal; the four symbols you posted don't look anything like card suits, and the 'nu' that tom posted looks like an 'n'.
 
Yikes! There oughta be a law!
 

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