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Trying to make a family sign for a secret Santa Christmas gift at work and cannot figure out how to make a French accent on the letter e, é. I use the Mac keystroke to create it here but in Easel the keystroke is not recognized. A search of the forum doesn’t seem to bring up any answers.
Did you give the apostrophe a right slant? A straight apostrophe would not be the proper way. I wonder why Easel does not recognize accented characters as valid. Does it support only basic ASCII and not Latin or other types of characters? If this is the case it is quite limiting to English language. Maybe there is a setting to enable Unicode.
@MartinLowe I just tried the accents in Easel (on a Mac) and they work, however, I’m wondering if you are using a font where the accents have not been defined therefore not available. I tried several fonts and I was able to produce the accents. What font are you using?
I created accents in most fonts (regular not pro version)and produced them on my Shapeoko. I noticed that some of the fonts will not give lower case. I was able to produce accents in all fonts but… I noticed that you need the bit to be small enough to produce the characters since I do not have pro, I cannot v-carve in Easel so I used 1/16 flat endmill. In Cinzel, I could not produce the letter properly because the serif is very pronounced so I increased the size from 2in to 3 in and it came out properly (last letter in each row). So we know it works, the question is why does it not work for you, maybe it is your keyboard, my keyboard is set to produce the accents. You could try generating the accents through the character and symbol viewer.
EDIT: I forgot to write an important point: It appears that several fonts do not appear to have lower case letters. You original post indicates a lower case é since Cinzel is one of those letters that does not appear to have lower case, the lower case letters with or witout accent will not appear. In my case, if I type in lower case, Easel will replace will the same letter in upper case.
I use a bilingual (English French keyboard definition named Canadian French ISO keyboard. The é is the / key, next to the shift key on the regular US English keyboard. You can load this and other definitions in the keyboard in system preference and you can change between the different definitions.
Another way to achieve this is just to input the ASCII Keycode; ex. “Alt+138” (holding down the Alt key and pressing 138) produces è … and if you want the accent the other way it’s “Alt+130” … producing … é .
¡£] this is what you get for Option 138, maybe you can find an equivalent but in the Mac OS, there is an easy panel called character viewer where you can access for all the characters.
Windows has a similar “thing”…and I didn’t say OPTION+138…I said OPTION+e.
Fortunately the ASCII table predates all of us and all modern computers have a shortcut to produce all ASCII symbols. You just have to know how to utilize it …
I’m not MAC Phobic…I just dislike a lot of things about their products and enjoy being able to do what I want to with my operating system.