Description: bug = red question mark in formula a_ni //bug a_nI //bug a_Ni //bug a_NI //bug a_in //bug a_iN //bug a_IN //bug a_{ni} //bug b_ni //bug a_11 //works a_aa //works a_a1 //works a_mi //works a_n1 //works a_nii //works Description when it failed: IF 2-sign indizes AND one sign "n" another "i", any combination, any upper/lower-case Steps to Reproduce: Copy in formula-editor for test: a_11 = a_nn = a_ni = a_in = a_Ni = a_nI = a_nni = a_nii Actual Results: red question mark in formula Expected Results: correct representation of indizes a_ni Reproducible: Always User Profile Reset: No Additional Info: [Information automatically included from LibreOffice] Locale: de Module: TextDocument [Information guessed from browser] OS: Windows (All) OS is 64bit: yes //Info LibreOffice Version: 5.1.5.2 Build-ID: 7a864d8825610a8c07cfc3bc01dd4fce6a9447e5 CPU-Threads: 8; BS-Version: Windows 6.1; UI-Render: Standard; Gebietsschema: de-DE (de_DE); Calc: CL Builds ID: LibreOffice 5.1.5.2 User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 6.1; WOW64; rv:54.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/54.0
Hi lueolli, ni is a reserved word for: inverted sign is element of You can find the complete list of the reserved words at the end of LibreOffice 3.5 Math Guide at https://wiki.documentfoundation.org/images/6/65/MG35-MathGuide_LO.pdf Jacques
Hello Jacques, im sorry for taking your time, thank you for your help. Didnt know that this will be interpreted as a keyword but seems absolutely clearly now. Solution: Read Math Guide Write a_"ni" Thanks again