
Thanks again and have a super day in the meantime. If you do have any questions for me, let me know and I'll be happy to help.

Hopefully one of these two options work for you. The only limitation that you might face is on websites that do not support Unicode as a result of which the text might not appear completely.

In this example, for superscript 4 (⁴) you can type Alt+X+2074 and the character should now appear. All you have to do is simply copy superscript 2 text that you have created on the website and paste it wherever you want. Here's a list of codes superscript unicodes: For the Character Code part, you just type the code you want for the character you want. It can be done by using the following key command: Alt+X+Character Code. This process seems technical, but is really pretty simple. However, if you needed more values, you could insert a unicode character directly into your cell as an option. This option will only work for the values of 1, 2, or 3, as those are the only superscript number symbols available directly from the symbol menu. Once this is added to your cell, the character will flow through to your destination.From here, choose the Superscript one option.In the Spreadsheet cell, double-click and select Insert > Symbol > Symbol Library.If you were to link between next gen content specifically, then the formatting would follow.Ī way to possible get around this in a classic Document is to insert a special character into the Spreadsheet link instead of a formatted number.

I tested to confirm, but in this case, when you link from a next gen Spreadsheet to a classic Document, the formatting of the superscript (or other formatting) will NOT flow through.
