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Accents over French/Spanish letters InDesign

Explorer ,
Feb 22, 2013 Feb 22, 2013

I have a French document with lots of accented letters. I was trying to type those letters with accents on them, but I was unable to. I know how, I've done it in the past. I even looked it up online to get the correct keystrokes for the correct direction and accent. I get the accent and then the letter. InDesign is not allowing me to have the accent over the letter. Is this something that broke in CS5 and just needs to be fixed? Any ideas? I thought maybe this function was removed since now there is the handy Character Viewer at the top of the monitor. It is handy, but not convenient if you have a lot to type.

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correct answers 1 Correct answer

Community Expert , Feb 22, 2013 Feb 22, 2013

My whole job revolves around squeezing 40+ languages into InDesign, so I'm likely to reply to any post that is at all related to non-English stuff.

Minion Pro has an acute accent, which is what you get with option-shift-e, but it looks to me like Minion does not have a combining accent, which is what you'd need. Your method did not work for me with Minion Pro, but it does work with Times New Roman. (Note that I'm not not not suggesting that you use TNR in your layout, I just picked it because it

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Community Expert ,
Feb 22, 2013 Feb 22, 2013

Did you try to use the glyph panel? Or, you could switch temporarily to French or Spanish keyboard (system preferences on a Mac, I don't know how to do this on Windows).

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Community Expert ,
Dec 31, 2022 Dec 31, 2022

Hi, it is the same on Windows. I have a French physical keyboard for that reason. It is not easy to switch between keybords. My 'fingers' struggle a bit.

I ended up using MS Word to type it all in French, ignoring 'accents', then select the whole text, make sure it is set to French and let the spell check fix it all for me. This was the quickest.

As the text (.docx) was linked to InDesign doc, it all synced nicely.

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Community Expert ,
Feb 22, 2013 Feb 22, 2013

I thought you just bumped an old thread with a post of a solution that doesn't involve typing accents.

In your shoes, I might uinstall a French keyboard. Not hardware, mind you, but software. I'm not sitting at my Mac so I can't recall the precise steps but it's in the same menu area as the Character viewer. THis might not work for you because for all such keyboards you wind up needing to memorize that e.g. the backslash on your English-hardware keyboard has been replaced with the cedilla.

I even looked it up online to get the correct keystrokes for the correct direction and accent. I get the accent and then the letter. InDesign is not allowing me to have the accent over the letter. Is this something that broke in CS5 and just needs to be fixed?

Probably not. Can you tell us what keystroke(s) you're using, what operating system you're using, and what font you are using? InDesign CS5 is occasionally flaky about "combining accents" but if your font doesn't have the combining glyphs I think it simply won't work. I think.

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Explorer ,
Feb 22, 2013 Feb 22, 2013

Well the font could very well be the issue, but I just tried with Minion Pro with the same problem. Font is DIN Pro. System is 10.6.8. CS5. Yeah, not sure I'd want to install a keyboard for one file. I guess it could be helpful to know about though. Usually I have 1 or 2 letters I need to put an accent on and Character Viewer work fine for that. Not super conveninet and the keyboard, but helpful, especially for those characters that you don't know.

Option + Shift + e then e again to get that accent on the e.

So you saw me on that old thread. I ran into it while looking for something to solve this issue. I had already resolved that issue, which for me wasn't an InDesign problem.

I opened the glyph window/panel, but that doesn't help with while typing. It is more convenient than Character Viewer I think.

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Explorer ,
Feb 22, 2013 Feb 22, 2013

I saw this website yesterday, but apparently didn't follow the keycomands very well. I tried it again and it worked. User error. For some reason I put a shift in there when it was just  "option + e + letter to be accented".

http://symbolcodes.tlt.psu.edu/accents/codemac.html

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Explorer ,
Apr 18, 2015 Apr 18, 2015

Joel, thanks for that link as that led me to search for windows commands (I'm using a PC) and found Windows Alt Key Codes which worked for me

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Community Expert ,
Feb 22, 2013 Feb 22, 2013

My whole job revolves around squeezing 40+ languages into InDesign, so I'm likely to reply to any post that is at all related to non-English stuff.

Minion Pro has an acute accent, which is what you get with option-shift-e, but it looks to me like Minion does not have a combining accent, which is what you'd need. Your method did not work for me with Minion Pro, but it does work with Times New Roman. (Note that I'm not not not suggesting that you use TNR in your layout, I just picked it because it's a font that I know everybody has that also contains combining accents.) But if you use your method to type an acute accent on a font that actually has a combining accent, and then select that combined e-plus-combining-acute glyph and change it to Minion Pro, then in the glyphs menu it'll show up as a precomposed e-with-acute. 

I handle a vast amount of Vietnamese text, so I run into this kind of issue all the time. You may want to look at this thread if you want to make your own special-character-input scripts, or maybe at this page of this book if you want to memorize all of the special-input key combos so you can specify e-with-acute and a-with-acute and whatever-with-cedilla directly, rather than trying to use combining accents. I think those instructions will work but I once again have to offer my at-work, no-Mac, I-didn't-test disclaimer.

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New Here ,
Aug 13, 2015 Aug 13, 2015

I'm using InDesign CC on a Mac, and there you go to TYPE and then select GLYPS. If you've already typed your character in INDD, such as an "e" for example, highlight it, and then go to the Glyphs chart, make sure the font you're using is showing up in the bottom window (mine says Minion Pro, for example), and then find the e with the accent in the panel, and click on it, and it should add the accent to your already-highlighted e in your INDD copy , like this - é. Good luck!

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New Here ,
Dec 31, 2022 Dec 31, 2022

this a perfect solution! thank you!

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Community Expert ,
Dec 31, 2022 Dec 31, 2022

After 'fixing' the first word using Glyphs, for very long text, I often copy the word corrected, past in a Find-Replace window to update the whole content. I hate fixing the same issue several times in a document.

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Participant ,
Aug 25, 2024 Aug 25, 2024
LATEST

It worked for me (on a Mac) in Adobe Garamond. But, highlight the letter you want frenched (like an "e"), go to Type, Glyphs, then type the letter "a" in the search field to find the letter "e" (total ID logic). 

Screen Shot 2024-08-25 at 9.38.22 AM.pngexpand image

 

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Community Expert ,
Dec 31, 2022 Dec 31, 2022

You can use this script to enter accented characters:

https://creativepro.com/files/kahrel/indesign/compose.html

If the font you're using contains the accented character that you want to enter, that character is used. Otherwise the script creates the character by combining the letter and the floating accent. Floating accents are almost always available in fonts, especially modern ones.

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Enthusiast ,
Dec 31, 2022 Dec 31, 2022

Hi,

 

If you work a lot with Spanish and French, my piece of advice is: Get a Spanish keyboard. Why? Because it's basically just an English-speaking keyboard with some keys changed and you'll have all the accented characters for Spanish AND French at hand.

 

Why not the French keyboard? Because it's not a QWERTY keyboard but an AZERTY one.

 

If you work with English, French and Spanish, this is the best option.

 

One caveat: If you plan to work with Portuguese as well, then you might prefer a Portuguese keyboard, not a Spanish or French ones.

 

Best whishes and happy New Year (typed with an Spanish keyboard)

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Community Expert ,
Dec 31, 2022 Dec 31, 2022

My solution for these things is a good macro keyboard with as many hard macro keys as can still be found. (They came out with 18, dwindled to 8-12, and now have sometimes as few as 4.)

 

I have found hardware keyboard macros to be a streamlining, time-saving, convenience tool beyond all others, for every conceivable human-input need. Including working with accented characters in all languages when I do such things.

 

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New Here ,
Jan 10, 2024 Jan 10, 2024

I went to Word, typed the accented letter, then cut and pasted it into InDesign.

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Community Expert ,
Jan 11, 2024 Jan 11, 2024

This thread is eleven years old... But if you are able to type an accented letter on Word, you should be able to do it in InDesign.

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New Here ,
Aug 04, 2024 Aug 04, 2024

This is easy. In the Character dialog box settings in your workspace panel, click the three dots to open up "more options". Or go to Window>Type&Tables>Character. From there, you should see a language drop down selector on the left. Select your language. This enables language features from the keyboard. Often, it will be the `~ (top left on standard keyboard) or '" (adjacent to the enter key on a standard keyboard). You hit one of those and then the letter you want to accent.

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Community Expert ,
Aug 05, 2024 Aug 05, 2024

@defaultds9emm708z4h you are answering an eleven years post, and you write:

go to Window>Type&Tables>Character. From there, you should see a language drop down selector on the left. Select your language. This enables language features from the keyboard.

This is wrong: choosing the language in this dropdown menu only set the way how text will be hypehenated and which dictionary will be used for spell checking, but it has absolutely no effect on the keyboard.

 

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