![]() ![]() (1) Right-click the font file, choose properties, selecte the Details tab, and see the status there. There are several ways to see what the embeddability status of a font is. This is a bit weird, seeing as it’s a freely available font, so I’m not sure why they’d do that. The handwriting font you’re trying to use has the most restrictive setting applied to it: “No Embedding”, as can be seen from the screenshot. “Installable” is the most permissive level.įor FormMagic to successfully embed the font in the PDF, it’s embedding permission has to be either “3. I’ve looked into this more carefully than I had before, and the answer is as follows.Ī font file has something called “embedding permission”. This topic was modified 1 year, 7 months ago by ~~Ariel~~. Please let me know if you need more information The PDF also includes a link to the font I’m trying to embed – see text on page 182. Please find attached a few pages of the exported PDF, showing some of the more simple form layouts. But I don’t know if this is possible either. Helvetica > Arial > Sans serif.Īlternatively, a plan B would be to have the text field’s font editable by the teacher, – so they can type in the text (say as default Helvetica) and then change the font manually to the correct one. Or perhaps it’s possible to set a font default chain? like in a CSS style? eg. Is this possible? or do I need to use only web safe fonts? I assumed the font would be imbedded with the file with Formmagic but it doesn’t look like I’ve done it correctly. (The alignment and text size seemed to be working fine though) It all works fine for me when I test the PDF but when the client tries to use the file, only dots appear for the characters they type in the form field – as if they don’t have the font loaded. ![]() I was hoping to be able to embed that font in the final PDF, so it would be useable by the teacher regardless of their platform. I’ve set up my font preferences for all the text fields in InDesign through the ‘Forms and Buttons’ panel, including the font which is a specific one used by the department for all their workbooks (note: not a system font). Ideally I would like the font, alignment and size of the text to match the other worksheets.įormmagic sounded perfect to help me do this. I have a group of workbooks set up in InDesign, with many activity sheets for the teacher to print out from the final exported PDF.įor a lot of the worksheets I have form fields added to the page so the teacher can add in text tailored to their classes if they wish, before printing the PDF pages. I was prompting for instructions on how to test your code.I am working on project for a client in our state education department. When I wrote:īut I've never done much with I18N and L10N. That's how "all this works".įor testing, if you tell me where and how you manage to get FontForge to display the French versions I might have better luck testing the Croatian versions. ![]() MacEncLangToTable() on line 1103 maps 18 to that croatian array. So that array is more or less the table at except with 8 entries per line rather than 16. The 30th row starts with 0x010d, which is the Unicode value back. The Croatian mapping array croatian starts on line 129 of macenc.c. Translate that to octal: \350 That's the code.Note the Hex value in the leftmost column and that in the topmost column: E_ + _8 -> E8.It's there with its unicode hex value below it in the second-from-the-bottom row. The thicker boxes are around the characters of most interest. Rather than answer your whole question, here is a procedure using č as an example: But assuming the file should be kept as it is. ![]() If it's a pre-unicode-support attempt to support multiple character sets, it would be best to just translate everything into unicode and be done with it. Before I go on, I've looked at this a bit more and I'm still not sure what the point of this file is. ![]()
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