English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

8 answers

OH YES THERE IS A WAY....

It can be done by puting together a keyboard driver that will let you access all sorts of symbols. ∴ would just be slightly harder to type than @; You have to hold down two shifting keys instead of one.

If you'd like the driver. you can download it at http://keyboards.jargon-file.org/

2006-10-30 13:12:00 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

YES.

Click "insert", then select "symbol" and a dialogue box will pop up for symbols. To the left is a pull down menu for "subset". Click on the arrow and select "mathematical operators" and it's there!

2006-10-30 21:30:50 · answer #2 · answered by MyPreshus 7 · 0 0

I Dont realy think that there is a mathematical sign for therefore so that is too bad for you maybe you should stop acting like you are a proffesor or scientist or whatever

2006-10-30 21:07:58 · answer #3 · answered by Mamichulla 1 · 0 0

insert - symbol - select the symbol font and there it is - 3 little dots in a triangle

2006-10-30 21:08:13 · answer #4 · answered by hot.turkey 5 · 2 0

Why don't you try using the character map which is part of Microsoft operating system. You can find it if you click START/PROGRAMS/ACCESSORIES/SYSTEM TOOLS/CHARACTER MAP
If it isn't installed, go to the control panel/ADD REMOVE PROGRAMS/ADD REMOVE WINDOWS COMPONENTS double click ACCESSORIES and check character map; you will be prompted to insert your operation system CD.

2006-10-30 21:10:19 · answer #5 · answered by mystic_golfer 3 · 0 0

Yes you can do that in Ms Word.

http://spot.pcc.edu/~ssimonds/thisandthat/msword.htm
http://helpdesk.wisc.edu/page.php?id=941

2006-10-30 21:10:02 · answer #6 · answered by jetkidz 3 · 0 0

i dont think u can do it

2006-10-30 21:06:42 · answer #7 · answered by Brian V 1 · 0 0

sorry i don't think so

2006-10-30 21:06:08 · answer #8 · answered by Allieway 3 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers