kklw@mullian.ee.mu.OZ.AU (Kevin K L WONG) (01/17/90)
I am using Word 4.0 for my digital design report. For active low signals, an overbar is put on top of the signal name. How can I do that in Word 4.0? The only solution I found so far is using the box function in drawing formulae ie something like .\X.\TO(RD) but it doesn't look good. Any better idea? |~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~|~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~| | Kevin WONG | ACSnet : kklw@mullian.ee.mu.OZ | | Department of Elec Engineering | internet : kklw@mullian.ee.mu.OZ.AU | | University of Melbourne | uunet : uunet!munnari!mullian!kklw |
tejtemw@isis.educ.lon.ac.uk (EARL WILLIAMS) (01/19/90)
In article <3018@munnari.oz.au> kklw@mullian.ee.mu.OZ.AU (Kevin K L WONG) writes: >I am using Word 4.0 for my digital design report. For active low >signals, an overbar is put on top of the signal name. How can I >do that in Word 4.0? Use the overstrike formula with your character and "_" (superscripted). The formula is \O(X,_) to get "X-bar". "\" means command-option-\. In single-spaced text, this will mess up the line spacing unless you indicate a negative point value for the line-spacing in the Paragraph box. -- Earl M. Williams ?8^) "No matter where you go, there you are." Inst. of Education, U. of London -Buckaroo Banzai INTERNET/JANET: tejtemw@isis.educ.lon.ac.uk "When in doubt, lay it out." BITNET: tejtemw%<same>@ukacrl.bitnet -Captain Ultimate [Frisbee]
gillies@p.cs.uiuc.edu (01/24/90)
> Use the overstrike formula with your character and "_" (superscripted).
You can also use a space " " and give it the underline look. It may
take several spaces to get the overbar to look right.
I suggest you make one copy of the character, then copy it over and
over while you write your report.
This is something MS-Word could really use: An overbar function
_
\OV(x) -> x