Vertically aligned superscripts and subscripts

P

Paul Brown

:: MS-Word 97 SR-2

Can anyone help with a technique to insert superscripts and subscripts
such that they are vertically aligned, for example x_0 squared below
(view in courier font)

2
y = a x + a x
0 1 0 2 0


I don't want to use MS Equation Editor, I want a technique that can be
used within a paragraph, which would appear to rule out tables or
frames. Also I don't want to embed a graphics object either.

TIA,
Paul.
 
M

Mike Williams [MVP]

Paul said:
Can anyone help with a technique to insert superscripts and subscripts
such that they are vertically aligned, for example x_0 squared below
(view in courier font)

2
y = a x + a x
0 1 0 2 0


I don't want to use MS Equation Editor, I want a technique that can be
used within a paragraph, which would appear to rule out tables or
frames. Also I don't want to embed a graphics object either.

Is there an issue with simply using inline sub/superscripting ?



Mike Williams - Office MVP http://www.mvps.org/faq/

Please respond in the same thread on this newsgroup - not by email!
Include details of your application and Windows versions, plus any
service pack updates. Answers may also be found by reading recent
posts, checking the FAQs or searching the relevant Google archive at.
http://groups.google.com/groups?group=microsoft.public
 
D

Doug Robbins - Word MVP

Hi Paul,

Use an { ADVANCE } field, such as x2{ ADVANCE \l 4 }0 where the 2 and the 0
are superscripted and subscripted respectively. You may also want to adjust
the vertical postion as well as with the above construction, the 2 is
sitting right on top of the 0.

Please post any further questions or followup to the newsgroups for the
benefit of others who may be interested. Unsolicited questions forwarded
directly to me will only be answered on a paid consulting basis.

Hope this helps
Doug Robbins - Word MVP
 
S

Suzanne S. Barnhill

Equation Editor objects can be (and in Word 2000 and above are by default)
inline, and EE is much the easiest way to do this.

--
Suzanne S. Barnhill
Microsoft MVP (Word)
Words into Type
Fairhope, Alabama USA
Word MVP FAQ site: http://www.mvps.org/word
Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so
all may benefit.
 
M

Martha

(e-mail address removed) (Paul Brown) wrote
Can anyone help with a technique to insert superscripts and subscripts
such that they are vertically aligned [example snipped]
I don't want to use MS Equation Editor, I want a technique that can be
used within a paragraph, which would appear to rule out tables or
frames. Also I don't want to embed a graphics object either.

You can try using an { EQ } field (look it up in help). It's painful,
but it has all the basics. Make sure never to double-click such a
field, though, because that will (try to) invoke Equation Editor.

Just fyi, in proper mathematical notation, the subscript and the power
would *not* be aligned. When writing "x1 squared", the 1 would be
closer to the x than the 2. You're squaring the variable called x1,
not squaring x and then doing something else to it, with the something
else denoted by a 1 subscript. It's nice to get the power and the
subscript to overlap slightly, because it looks better that way, but
they shouldn't really be aligned. (It's also nice to get the subscript
closer to the variable than it would be if you just lowered it by a
few points; it makes it apparent that they belong together.)
 

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