Dear Kino, Thanks for the additional info. At first I didn't understand that I should actually type each of the 7 characters \x{302}. When I did, it worked to a CERTAIN extent; in some cases, however, it didn't get converted. I shall further investigate the matter. <Hebraica> is not a unicode font. Old, yes, mine is of 1998. Best, Takamitsu > From: Kino <[log in to unmask]> > Reply-To: <[log in to unmask]> > Date: Wed, 6 Apr 2011 01:44:47 +0900 > To: Nisus <[log in to unmask]> > Subject: Re: Character position > > On 2011-04-05 [+0900 JST], at 8:52 PM, takamitsu muraoka wrote: > >> The character in question is located on the character palette (Glyph) on >> GID 216; UTFB CC82. > > I think Hebraica is a visual Hebrew font recognized as a Roman font in the > Classic MacOS. Right? If so, it should not have a character whose UTF-8 byte > sequence is CC82 (U+0302). Presumably, the font is so old that it does not > have Unicode indexes or its indexes are wrong. Anyway, the only Mac Roman > character looking like 'a circumflex accent' is U+02C6. So try to enter it by > hitting option-6 (dead key) followed by space with U.S. Extended keyboard > layout. Or use \x{02C6} in PowerFind Pro mode. > > Kino