How can I put text , image and symbols together through one field - asp.net

I am creating a website for creating test papers for maths , physics etc, as it is not accepting special symbols.
(1.) If sin(symbol theta) then the general value of is
(a) 2n(pie symbol)
(b) 4(pie symbol)
(c)
(d) None of these
I have done rest all but it is taking only simple text questions , not symbols.
How to do that?

A quick search on Google lead me here: http://barzilai.org/math_sym.htm.
So, instead of typing the word, or trying to copy in the symbol from whatever text editor you are using, simply copy in the little set of characters from this website, and it should show the character in the website.

Here you see a conversion table http://htmlhelp.com/reference/html40/entities/symbols.html
Usage
You can just use it in your HTML, for instance
<div>This is the capital letter phi: Φ</div>

Related

paste0 regular and italicized text in R

I need to concatenate two strings within an R object: one is just regular text; the other is italicized. So, I tried a lot of combinations, e.g.
paste0(" This is Regular", italic( This is Italics))
The desired result should be:
This is Regular This is Italics
Any ideia on how to do it?
Thanks!
In plot labels, you can use expressions, see mathematical annotation :
plot(1,xlab=expression("This is regular"~italic("this is italic")))
To provide an string for which an HTML parser will recognise the need to render the text in Italics, wrap the text in <i> and </i>. For example: "This is plain text, but <i>this is in Italics</i>.".
However, most HTML processors will assume that you want your text to appear as-is and will escape their input by default. This means that the special meanings of certain characters - including < and > will be "turned off". You need to tell the processor not to do this. How you do that will depend on context. I can't tell you that because you haven't given me context.
Are you for example, writing to a raw HTML file? (You need do nothing.) Are you writing to a Markdown file? If so, how? In plain text or in a rendered chunk? Are you writing a caption to a graphic? (Waldi has suggested a solution.) Etc, etc....

Create new emphasis command R Markdown

In R Markdown, to make a text bold, we just need to do:
**code**
The the word code shows in bold.
I was wondering if there is a way to create a new command, let's say:
***code***
That would make the text highlighted?
Thanks!
It is not easily possible to create new markup, but one can change the way existing markup commands are rendered. Text enclosed by three stars is interpreted as emphasized strong emphasis. So one has to change that interpretation and change it to something else. One way to do so is via pandoc Lua filters. We just have to match on pandoc's internal representation of emphasized strong text and convert it to whatever we want:
function Strong (strong)
-- if this contains only one element, and if that element
-- is emphasized text, convert it to highlighted text.
local element = #strong.content == 1 and strong.content[1]
if element and element.t == 'Emph' then
table.insert(element.content, 1, pandoc.RawInline('html', '<mark>'))
table.insert(element.content, pandoc.RawInline('html', '</mark>'))
return element.content
end
end
The above works for HTML output. One would have to define what "highlighted text" means for each targeted format.
See this and this question for other approaches to the problem, and for details of how to use the filter with R Markdown.

Replace text between brackets and carraige returns in Atom.io

I'm using Atom.io to edit a text transcription of an interview for qualitative analysis.
Here's a sample line:
[30-Aug-19 03:48 PM] Interviewer
See you in 10.
How do I edit it so that it looks like this:
Interviewer: See you in 10.
i.e. remove the text between the square brackets and the square brackets themselves, replace the carriage return with a semi-colon and space.
I have tried looking in the atom manual, tried looking at regex expressions and I can't even begin to get my head round them (not much of a programmer, and not Javascript at all).
You need to use the search & replace with the regex mode
Activate the regex mode, then search for \[.*? Interviewer and replace by Interviewer:, it should do the trick

convert comment string to an ASCII character list in sicstus-prolog

currently I am working on comparison between SICStus3 and SICStus4 but I got one issue that is SICStus4 will not consult any cases where the comment string has carriage controls or tab characters etc as given below.
Example case as given below.It has 3 arguments with comma delimiter.
case('pr_ua_sfochi',"
Response:
answer(amount(2370.09,usd),[[01AUG06SFO UA CHI Q9.30 1085.58FUA2SFS UA SFO Q9.30 1085.58FUA2SFS NUC2189.76END ROE1.0 XT USD 180.33 ZPSFOCHI 164.23US6.60ZP5.00AY XF4.50SFO4.5]],amount(2189.76,usd),amount(2189.76,usd),amount(180.33,usd),[[fua2sfs,fua2sfs]],amount(6.6,usd),amount(4.5,usd),amount(0.0,usd),amount(18.6,usd),lasttktdate([20061002]),lastdateafterres(200712282]),[[fic_ticketinfo(fare(fua2sfs),fic([]),nvb([]),nva([]),tktiss([]),penalty([]),tktendorsement([]),tourinfo([]),infomsgs([])),fic_ticketinfo(fare(fua2sfs),fic([]),nvb([]),nva([]),tktiss([]),penalty([]),tktendorsement([]),tourinfo([]),infomsgs([]))]],<>,<>,cat35(cat35info([])))
.
02/20/2006 17:05:10 Transaction 35 served by static.static.server1 (usclsefat002:7551) running E*Fare version $Name: build-2006-02-19-1900 $
",price(pnr(
user('atl','1y',<>,<>,dept(<>,'0005300'),<>,<>,<>),
[
passenger(adt,1,[ptconly(n)])
],
[
segment(1,sfo,chi,'ua','<>','100',20140901,0800,f,20140901,2100,'737',res(20140628,1316),hk,pf2(n,[],[],n),<>,flags(no,no,no,no,no,no,no,no,no)),
segment(2,chi,sfo,'ua','<>','101',20140906,1000,f,20140906,1400,'737',res(20140628,1316),hk,pf2(n,[],[],n),<>,flags(no,no,no,no,no,no,no,no,no))
]),[
rebook(n),
ticket(20140301,131659),
dbaccess(20140301,131659),
platingcarrier('ua'),
tax_exempt([]),
trapparm("trap:ffil"),
city(y)
])).
The below predicate will remove comment section in above case.
flatten-cases :-
getmessage(M1),
write_flattened_case(M1),
flatten-cases.
flatten-cases.
write_flattened_case(M1):-
M1 = case(Case,_Comment,Entry),!,
M2 = case(Case,Entry),
writeq(M2),write('.'),nl.
getmessage(M) :-
read(M),
!,
M \== end_of_file.
:- flatten-cases.
Now my requirement is to convert the comment string to an ASCII character list.
Layout characters other than a regular space cannot occur literally in a quoted atom or a double quoted list. This is a requirement of the ISO standard and is fully implemented in SICStus since 3.9.0 invoking SICStus 3 with the option --iso. Since SICStus 4 only ISO syntax is supported.
You need to insert \n and \t accordingly. So instead of
log('Response:
yes'). % BAD!
Now write
log('Response:\n\tyes').
Or, to make it better readable use a continuation escape sequence:
log('Response:\n\
\tyes').
Note that using literal tabs and literal newlines is highly problematic. On a printout you do not see them! Think of 'A \nB' which would not show the trailing spaces nor trailing tabs.
But there are also many other situations like: Making a screenshot of program text, making a photo of program text, using a 3270 terminal emulator and copying the output. In the past, punched cards. The text-mode when reading files (which was originally motivated by punched cards). Similar arguments hold for the tabulator which comes from typewriters with their manually settable tab stops.
And then on SO it is quite difficult to type in a TAB. The browser refuses to type it (very wisely), and if you copy it in, you get it rendered as spaces.
If I am at it, there is also another problem. The name flatten-case should rather be written flatten_case.

IDML : What are Kinsoku/Mojikumi tables?

I am new to the world of Adobe InDesign and IDML file format. I am trying to understand the IDML file format so that I can create IDML files dynamically through code!
I am going through the IDML File format specification and have found references to "Mojikumi Tables" and "Kinsoku Tables" and "Aki". Though the documentation defines various attributes for these elements, there's no clear explanation what these elements actually are.
Any pointers or links to relevant articles would be really helpful.
Thanks.
These are all additional typography settings used in laying out Japanese text.
Kinsoku: A rule set in the Japanese language that is used to determine characters that are not permitted at the beginning or end of a line. Reference.
Mojikumi: Determines spacing between punctuation, symbols, numbers, and other character classes in Japanese type. Reference.
Aki: Means space in Japanese:
"When the glyphs that correspond to characters of different character
classes come together in a run of text, there is spacing behaviour. In
other words, extra space, measured using a fraction of an em, is
introduced depending on which two character classes are in proximity*.
Typical values are one-fourth and one-half of an em"
(Footnote: * 'In Japanese this space is referred to as aki, which simply means
"space"')
Reference and source for this quote.
Here's a link to a book that should provide more information: CJKV Information Processing, 2nd Edition

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