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Does anyone know what this feature is for? I had someone stumble across it by mistake. She defined a "variable" to be one "M/ϕ" and the display actually showed M directly over the ϕ. The whole thing shows up inside of square brackets. She proceeded to assign a value to this expression, and it can be used later on as if it were a variable (as long as the square brackets are also used). Is this the intent of the feature?
Preston
Solved! Go to Solution.
A quote from "Mathcad Help" (see more in attachment):
"[Ctrl] [Shift] J Type characters inside brackets as in chemistry notation.
[Ctrl] [Shift] K Type characters that usually insert operators."
I use so:
Good find. Maybe its an affiliation of ctri+shift+k
Mike
It's a documented feature "chemistry notation".
Search 'ctrl][shift]J' in the Mathcad help menu to find more info.
I wasn't able to find it in the (PDF) manual.
Luc
Mike Armstrong wrote:
Good find. Maybe its an affiliation of ctri+shift+k
Mike
Yes:
A quote from "Mathcad Help" (see more in attachment):
"[Ctrl] [Shift] J Type characters inside brackets as in chemistry notation.
[Ctrl] [Shift] K Type characters that usually insert operators."
And what about [Ctrl] [Shift] N
[Ctrl][Shift]N is the Namespace Operator
(not sure if you were asking or just throwing out a teaser?)
Also, all keyboard shortcuts for Mathcad 15 can be found in the attachment (or here: http://communities.ptc.com/docs/DOC-2476).