

- #KEYBOARD SHORTCUT FOR SUBSCRIPT POWERPOINT MAC OS#
- #KEYBOARD SHORTCUT FOR SUBSCRIPT POWERPOINT MANUAL#
- #KEYBOARD SHORTCUT FOR SUBSCRIPT POWERPOINT WINDOWS#
It doesn't seem possible in Mac OS or at least it's unreliable as it is now or has been in OS X. It would be nice to have a common solution that works across ALL apps and scenarios. The autocorrect or system settings might work sporadically for this or learn it and work great. You would have to use a specific keystroke for each program for that. In ADDITION to doing the above apps tend to control the characters' use and do not follow the system settings. Clearly, the characters exist in the table, somewhere.
#KEYBOARD SHORTCUT FOR SUBSCRIPT POWERPOINT MANUAL#
Uncommon fractions would require manual intervention. Alt+W,Q: Open the Zoom dialog box to change the zoom for the slide. You would also have to do this for common fractions like, '½, ¼, etc.' Mac's error correcting schema seems to occur automatically for specific combinations. Ctrl+T: Open the Font dialog box when text or object is selected. I still seem to have a character substitution in place for 0ᵀᴴ (e.g., 100th is typed as 0ᵀᴴ and put the '10' or other characters before it), as an example. Make sure you are in the Home menu, then click on the Subscript button labeled. Put your cursor in the exact place where you want to type your.

Highlight the text and hold down the Ctrl key. Place your cursor where you want the subscript to go.

#KEYBOARD SHORTCUT FOR SUBSCRIPT POWERPOINT WINDOWS#
Windows does this rather elegantly somehow. You can also use a subscript shortcut or superscript shortcut on the keyboard to change the text formatting. I actually had this working, sorta nicely at one time, but then it stopped. You would have to force superscripts for '1st, 2nd.' or for the last numeric character typed before a space to force those following specific two letters as superscripts WHERE THEY OCCUR. These might also affect Web browser apps like the one I'm using now.
