See what just happened? No, that’s not a superscripted zero. Now make sure you have NumLock turned OFF and hit the 0 key on your numpad. Then click File | Save as usual.įinally, run the AutoHotkey program from your Start Menu. If you are using Notepad2 you can do this by going to File | Encoding | UTF-8 and clicking “Yes” to the warning. Now that you have AutoHotkey.ahk opened, delete everything in there (after reading it if you care) and paste the following in its place. If you don’t know what this means or don’t have an editor that can do this then download Notepad2 and open the file in that program. Look in your My Documents folder and open up AutoHotkey.ahk in a text editor that you can save as UTF-8 in. Run the installer and leave all the defaults. This is the most recent version of AutoHotkey and specifically supports Unicode which is important for us. Of course you can expand on this beginning easily to solve whatever woes you are having.ĭownload the AutoHotkey_L installer. Here is a quick tutorial in using AutoHotkey to remap one of your numpad keys to the degree symbol. Personally it was the degree symbol that got me, and since I never use my numpad, I decided it would be much more useful if those keys actually entered stuff that I cared about. Are you tired of having to remember that ALT+0176 is the degree symbol ° ? Maybe there are other special characters that you want to be able to type easier.
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