2) The press release mentions accented characters... other
ASCII characters, notably "@" so I can do email addresses
and things like " ~ ^ * + | & [ ] { } so I can scribble
C++ program fragments...<<<
The Graffiti Tutorial is designed to get you started with
most of Graffiti. We've left out the Extended characters
and the ShortCuts intentionally. You'll have no trouble
learning those when you receive Graffiti itself.
There are two ways to "shift" to Numbers and Caps: You can
tap on the Num or Caps lock on the Graffiti writing area,
or you can make the caps or number shift gesture. To
un-shift, simply make the gesture again as Nigel Ballard
pointed out. You can also use the "reset" gesture, the
"backslash" started from the bottom, to get back to
unshifted "alpha" mode from any shifted point.
All of the punctuation and key-cap symbols on the standard
ASCII keyboard are supported with a "dot" shift, a single
tap in the Graffiti writing area.
There is an extended shift gesture for other common but
less used characters like Greek/mathematical symbols,
trademark (tm), copyright, etc.
And, if you make the wrong shift? Simply use the "reset"
or "backspace" gesture.
Accented characters are even easier: There is a stroke
for each accent.
The reference card available on the networks supports the
tutorial only. There is a complete Quick-Reference card
packaged with the Graffiti software.
How big is Graffiti? Under 57 Kbytes. The Help is about
29K, but most of our testers found the Quick-Ref card all
they needed.
jack miller
Palm Tech Support