Your lisp probably does not have unicode support.
Lp, Andrej
On Sat, Jul 17, 2010 at 9:53 PM, Julien Martin <balteo at gmail.com> wrote:
> I understand now. It does give the desired effect. However, when I press
> ENTER, I don't get any output...
> Any idea?
> J.
>
> 2010/7/17 Andrej Vodopivec <andrej.vodopivec at gmail.com>
>>
>> I meant the escape key (ESC). ESCAPE + delta + ESCAPE is a sequence
>> which enters the unicode symbol for the greek character delta.
>>
>> Andrej
>>
>> On Sat, Jul 17, 2010 at 9:33 PM, Julien Martin <balteo at gmail.com> wrote:
>> > Andrej,
>> > Is that what you mean? %delta\t
>> > It does not work. What is the escape character apart from backslash?
>> > J.
>> >
>> > 2010/7/17 Andrej Vodopivec <andrej.vodopivec at gmail.com>
>> >>
>> >> On Sat, Jul 17, 2010 at 7:25 PM, Julien Martin <balteo at gmail.com>
>> >> wrote:
>> >> > Hello Raymond,
>> >> > Thanks. I use wxmaxima and greek letters work. My question was about
>> >> > the
>> >> > specific sequence of "delta" and "t" stuck together. Do you see the
>> >> > problem?
>> >> > Julien.
>> >>
>> >> If you are using wxMaxima compiled with unicode support and Maxima
>> >> compiled with a lisp which supports unicode, then you can enter the
>> >> greek character delta with ESCAPE + Delta + Escape.
>> >>
>> >> Andrej
>> >
>> >
>
>