If you do not find the symbol that you are looking for in the Symbol Browser, you can look in the Symbol dialog box. On the Insert menu, point to Symbol, click Advanced Symbol, and then click the Symbols tab. Click the symbol that you want.
Here's the neatest trick I've found for easily getting the Greek letters when I need them. In System Preferences - Keyboard - Shortcuts I have Select the previous input source mapped to cmd-space: and then in Input Sources I have my standard keyboard and the Greek keyboard: Now whenever I hit cmd-space my keyboard switches over to Γρεεκ (or vice-versa): The Greek letters map to the English letters in a much more rational way than what you get with holding option and hunting/pecking. The one caveat is that cmd-space is natively mapped as a shortcut for something else, but considering that I can't even remember what that something else is it wasn't very important.
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Edit: For completeness, it turns out that cmd-space is normally a shortcut that brings up a Spotlight search bar.
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Try this: library(stringi)?stringi Apply this to see your file codification striencdetect('path-to-your-file/your-file.csv', filteranglebrackets = T) striencdetect2('path-to-your-file/your-file.csv', locale = NULL) The first one works for me. Then apply the result in the read.csv, as the example bellow: df.
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