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This will be in the Letterlike Symbols, or Letterlike Symbols - All categories in the Special Characters gear selector > Customize List… > Symbols. Position your cursor where you want it in the document, and then double-click (or drag/drop) the copyright sign in Special Characters. It will appear in your document.
If you have "Symbol and text substitution" checked in Pages > Preferences > Auto-Correction, (c) will automatically change to ©. There are many built-in symbols in OS X. Open the International Preference Pane, click on the Input Menu tab & click the box next to Keyboard Viewer.
+Click on the flag > Show Keyboard Viewer+ When you hold down the Shift, Option and +Shift Option+ keys you will see what characters you get. Clicking on the keyboard is the same as typing. You will notice that holding down the option key shows some characters as orange. These are Dead Keys.
Similar to the copyright symbol it is a "p" with a circle around it. You look it up in the character palette. To do this: 1. Open System Preferences 2. Click on International 3. Click on the Input Menu tab 4. Check Character Palette You can also check Keyboard Viewer, as that comes in handy for looking up keys, too. 5. Quit System Preferences ...
There is also a System Preferences : Keyboard : Text panel entry that also offers (c). That too can be removed, or in Pages : Edit menu : Substitutions sub-menu : Uncheck Text Replacement. This latter approach is what you would also need to do to prevent Safari from expanding (c) to a copyright symbol. John Galt.
runawaygringo Author. Level 2. 139 points. Aug 18, 2022 6:36 AM in response to askbarnabas. When I press that #+= key, another set of symbols, including the slash ( / ), shows up. But I still don't see the division sign I am looking for.
On Windows you have very specific keyboard commands that you have to learn and/or get used to. On a Mac, there are these keyboard shortcuts as well, but there is also a unique window called "Special Characters" that is accessible within any application where you can type letters or numbers! @ = Shift-2. ® = Alt-R.
Bring up the keyboard on your iPad and then tap the World symbol (bottom left) until you see the emoji keyboard. Search for “copyright” and you will see the emoji that you can use. Axel F.
In the upper-left corner of that character viewer, you will see ⋯⃝ ˅ which you click. Select Customize the List… and select Technical Symbols. Then, back in the left panel of character viewer, you click Technical Symbols and it has the Place of Interest ⌘ symbol on it.
I use ( C ) next to my phone number (without spaces) in my mac mail signature to indicate that it is a cell number. How can I turn off the conversion to the copyright symbol just this time without losing the conversion for other times? There ought to be a way to do this on a one-off basis.