<h2>Enabling Unicode Characters</h2>
-<p>The Taxonomic Editor uses the operating system's default font to display all the fields that store specimen data. On a Macintosh, the system font is Unicode-compliant, so there is no problem displaying specimen data that includes symbols such as ♀ and ♂. On some, mainly older Windows systems, this is unfortunately not the case. To ensure that all data will be visible on your system, you may need to install a Unicode-compliant font on your Window’s system. If you are experiencing this problem it can be resolved quite easily:</p>
+<p>The Taxonomic Editor uses the operating system's default font to display all the fields that store specimen data. On a Macintosh, the system font is Unicode-compliant, so there is no problem displaying specimen data that includes symbols such as ♀ and ♂. On some, mainly older Windows systems, this is unfortunately not the case. To ensure that all data will be visible on your system, you may need to install a Unicode-compliant font on your Windows system. If you are experiencing this problem it can be resolved quite easily:</p>
<ol>
<li>Right-click on your Desktop.</li>
<li>Click Properties in the drop-down menu > Click the Appearance tab > Click the Advanced option. A new pop-up box will open.</li>
- <li>Click the “Item” drop-down menu and select Message Box.</li>
- <li>Click the “Font” drop-down menu and select Arial Unicode MS.
+ <li>Click the Item drop-down menu and select Message Box.</li>
+ <li>Click the Font drop-down menu and select Arial Unicode MS.
<p>The Unicode characters should now appear in the Taxonomic Editor.</p>
- <p><img src="" alt="" /></p>
+ <p><img src="../img/2_8a.jpg" alt="" /></p>
<p>If the Arial Unicode MS font is not shown as an option in the Font drop-down menu, and you are using Microsoft Office 2000 or later, you can obtain the font from your Microsoft Office CD:</p>
</li>
<li>Insert the Office CD, and do a Custom Install.</li>