![]() And finally we have the rather sad “installable”, which – far as I can tell – used to mean that when you opened a document, that font was automatically installed on your machine, so you could use it for other documents/presentations. Then we have “Editable”, which allows you to embed the font and anyone who opens your file will be able to edit that file, but not use the font for another file. As soon as they click into the document, they’ll get an error message offering to either lock the file for editing or to remove the font entirely and replace it with a system font. Followed (from memory) by “print & preview”, which menas that you can embed the font, but anyone who opens your document/presentation will only be able to view the file or present it. It starts with “no embedding”, which will not allow you to embed it at all. When you buy a font, you specify what embeddability level you need. Whether a font can be embedded or not is a font LICENCE issue. Just because you can install a font on your system doesn’t mean that you can embed it. It has multiple axes that need to be considered. The entire topic of fonts and font embedding in Office is kinda complex. Pretty frustrating stuff and I can literally find nothing about this particular issue anywhere and the whole company has just agreed to deal with it. So why aren’t these fonts resetting? Why is ppt confused about what font type any particular text area is? It’s literally only the font programming that is problematic. We have to select the text area, go to the color bucket, select more colors, then press “ok” and font will then appear in correct color format when you exit. The work around is – select the text area, select the font type again in the drop down (Calibri) to “reset” it.Īlso, the font will not always be the same color it is programmed to be in even after we select the desired color AGAIN from the color bucket. but the BIGGEST problem is that you have no idea which font didn’t convert because it says it’s correct when you select a piece of text on the slide, it will say it’s Calibri in the font type window Unfortunately the template will not convert ALL of the fonts completely when using the new template. What if the font is a system font, Calibri? I work for an organization that works out of their own custom templates.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |