The new OEIS search page!!!!!
Annette.Warlich at t-online.de
Annette.Warlich at t-online.de
Mon Jan 9 19:05:49 CET 2006
Am 09.01.2006 17:45 schrieb Graeme McRae:
> Yes, it's the web browser which is in charge of hyphenating, but it needs
> help. An example of a sequence that breaks inappropriately using Internet
> Explorer is http://www.research.att.com/~njas/sequences/A56592, which
> exhibits bad wrapping at -302332... As you say, Russ, a line break can
> ordinarily follow a regular "hyphen" character. There is, however, a
> Unicode "minus" character, which doesn't cause this wrapping. In HTML, you
> can generate it with & followed by #8722; I have created two pages with a
> whole lot of negative numbers to illustrate this point:
>
> http://mcraeclan.com/test1.htm uses ordinary hyphens as minus signs. You
> will notice the inappropriate line breaks if you are using Internet Explorer
> as your browser.
>
> http://mcraeclan.com/test2.htm uses the Unicode "minus" character. There
> are no inappropriate line breaks if you use Internet Explorer.
>
Hi Graeme, Seqfans,
there is no problem, neither with the sequence, nor with your two
testpages using mozilla firefox.
Gottfried Helms
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