![]() To create the "section" symbol (§) in Word documents that adhere to the BNC guidelines, follow these steps: In the Set section of the Symbol screen choose the Typographic Symbols and a list of symbols will display.Ĭlick on the "section" symbol (§), then click on Insert and Close.Ĭreating the "Section" Symbol (§) in Word Documents On the drop-down menu, click on the menu option Symbol. Place your cursor where you want the "section" symbol (§) to display. To create the "section" symbol (§) in WordPerfect documents that adhere to the BNC guidelines, follow these steps:Ĭreate your document with one of the acceptable fonts as defined in the document referenced above titled "Creating PDF Documents for CM/ECF". These rules also govern special symbols used within documents.Ĭreating the "Section" Symbol (§) in WordPerfect Documents The document includes a list of fonts that are acceptable to the BNC. The guidelines are defined in the document titled "Creating PDF Documents for CM/ECF" that is posted on our web site under the Electronic Case Filing menu. ![]() Here’s a Word 2011 document showing invisible characters.Documents that must be noticed by the Bankruptcy Noticing Center (BNC) must adhere to the guidelines set by the BNC or the notice will fail to be generated. Most of the requests I get on this topic concern turning invisibles off, because since the user often doesn’t know how he turned those invisible characters on, he also doesn’t know how to turn them off. ![]() Those characters are just as “charactery” as anything else you type– they take up space, they’re copy and paste-able, you can give them a point size– but they’re invisible, and they don’t print. Microsoft Word on the Mac has a nice feature that lets you show invisible (non-printing) characters such as returns, tabs, and spaces. ![]() Command-8 to show them, Command-8 again to hide them. ![]() There’s a keyboard shortcut for toggling invisible characters (like paragraph marks, and spaces, and tabs) in Microsoft Word on a Mac and as far as I know it’s worked in every version, since the very beginning. ![]()
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