

Here’s a few common Alt + X shortcuts plus others we are often asked about with their shortcuts that are baked into Office itself.Īnother option is to make an AutoCorrect shortcut but that requires setup on each computer you use. The British Pound Sterling symbol £ isn’t on a lot of keyboards even in the former colonies😊 If you need £ – type A3 then Alt + X. No one expects you to remember all the hex codes, after all there are over 40,000 of them in Unicode. Make a mistake? – as always, Undo is your friend – Ctrl + Z.Case doesn’t matter – a9 and A9 both work to make the Copyright symbol.Leading zeroes aren’t necessary – 00A5 and A5 both work to make the Yen symbol.press the X key while holding down the Alt key.X or x both work the same.Īn example to enter the Euro currency symbol € while holding down the Alt key press the X key.No space or other keys after typing the symbol value.NOT the U+ prefix that’s often used before Unicode values (it’s a programming thing).type a Unicode value into Word document or Outlook email.Try 20ACfor the € Euro symbol or A3 for the £ Pound currency sign. Having trouble? Here’s the step-by-step … start with a common symbol that most fonts support. It also works in Outlook for Windows because the email editor in Outlook is really Word in disguise. They work on any Microsoft Word for Windows, no special setup or configuration required. Alt + X feature has been in Word for Windows for a long time - at least since Word XP (Office XP released in 2001).
