Searched around seems to be alt+955 but doesn't work in browsers or notepad as it appears as ╗.
[QUOTE=wiki;17145943]But special characters, for example, λ (small lambda) cannot be obtained from its decimal code 955 or 0955, by using it with the Alt key, if used inside Notepad or Internet Explorer (IE). You'll get wrong character "╗" or "»".
The "Wordpad" (Windows Operating system) editor accepts the decimal (numeric entity codepoints) values above 256, so it can be used to obtain the Special/Unicode characters, then copy-paste where you need.
To obtain such special characters correctly, which have decimal codepoint values above the 256, another option is to use or type its hex equivalent codepoint first, then press Alt+X keys. To do this, open or start Wordpad, Word, etc editing application software, (this Alt+X process will not work in Internet Explorer, Notepad, etc). Type in 3BB, which is a hexadecimal equivalent numeric codepoint of the character λ, then press Alt+X. Hexcode 3BB will convert/turn into the λ character. If you press the Alt+X key combination again, then λ character will convert back to its hex equivalent codepoint, 3BB. Now character(s) can be copy pasted, where you want to use, or, (in IE) use its html hexadecimal equivalent code λ or its html decimal equivalent code λ.[/QUOTE]
Think so ?
Works in WordPad though just along with pretty much everything else such as those serious eyes (3232)
oh ok, well thanks for the help!
Like this, λ.
[editline]10:42PM[/editline]
Nah, but seriously, I don't know.
You type it like this:
Very carefully.
-snip-
λ
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