Path: utzoo!utgpu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!cs.utexas.edu!uunet!van-bc!ubc-cs!sol.UVic.CA!sirius!hedstrom From: hedstrom@sirius.UVic.CA (Brad Hedstrom) Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac.apps Subject: Re: I want an h-bar!!! Message-ID: Date: 10 Dec 90 10:51:17 GMT References: <1990Dec10.035502.11885@agate.berkeley.edu> Sender: news@sol.UVic.CA Distribution: comp.sys.mac.apps Organization: University of Victoria, Victoria, BC, Canada Lines: 19 In-Reply-To: gezelter@garnet.berkeley.edu's message of 10 Dec 90 03:55:02 GMT Nntp-Posting-Host: sirius.uvic.ca In article <1990Dec10.035502.11885@agate.berkeley.edu> gezelter@garnet.berkeley.edu (Dan Gezelter) writes: > Hi there! > A lot of the things I write need to have an h-bar symbol: > h-bar = Planck's constant/(2 Pi) for non-quantum people. > Symbol font doesn't seem to have that particular symbol, nor do any other > fonts that I have seen. I have created one in my MS Word glossary, but it > looks absolutely nothing like an h-bar, and I'd really like to start working > on my thesis. Does anyone know of any font that does h-bar's, and if so, > where can I get a copy of it? The Belont font that Design Science uses for MathType has the h-bar. I'm sure that the font is proprietary but you could get in touch with them and see if it's possible to get. _____________________________________________________________________________ Brad Hedstrom, University of Victoria, ECE Dept. Internet: hedstrom@sirius.uvic.ca UUCP: ...!{uw-beaver,ubc-vision}!uvicctr!hedstrom