![]() Then right-click on the character to select "Copy Character Info". (I determined these unicode values by copying the rendered tilde character from the TeXShop Preview window and pasting it into the Character Viewer app in the menu bar on a Mac. ![]() So cut-and-paste of a URL with a tilde from an Adobe-displayed pdf file into a web browser works fine. However, Adobe Acrobat somehow implemented a workaround and when displaying the pdf converts this into a regular "Tilde" TILDE Unicode: U 007E, UTF-8: 7E This means that cut-and-paste from Mac's Preview into a browser fails. ![]() (previously known as a "non-spacing tilde", indicating its usage for accents over another character) and that is what Mac's Preview renders. Investigating further, I learned that the character that latex puts into the pdf file is not a regular tilde character but a "Combining Tilde" COMBINING TILDE Unicode: U 0303, UTF-8: CC 83 Tldr: To avoid some of the difficulties of typesetting a proper tilde ~ character, I recommend adding \usepackage command will display a URL with tildes correctly, but forces it to use a fixed-space terminal font, and there are times when you want to use a tilde somewhere besides in a URL.) ![]() After wasting a lot of time on a related problem with LaTeXing a tilde, I thought I should record my results here in case it is a help to anyone else. ![]()
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