LinuxSBC, 10 months ago Linux has a “compose key,” which lets you press the compose key, O, then /, which makes that character (Ø and ø, to show it working, as well as ∞, ™, °, ², ß, ä, →, and many more). There’s a port for Windows called WinCompose.
Linux has a “compose key,” which lets you press the compose key, O, then /, which makes that character (Ø and ø, to show it working, as well as ∞, ™, °, ², ß, ä, →, and many more). There’s a port for Windows called WinCompose.