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#16
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Synchronizing fonts
On 2/23/2017 5:46 PM, Mayayana wrote:
"Neil" wrote | I'm only going to remove fonts not based on roman/Latin/western | characters. Neither do I plan on removing any dingbat/graphic fonts. | Since I don't read, write, or speak any Asian language, I do not need | those fonts. Same for Cyrillic. | | You may not use them when you create documents, but if you wind up on a | website that uses them, you're going to see a mess. Only the commonly | used fonts in other languages are supplied with the OS. | I don't have any such fonts and it's not a problem. If I'm at a Chinese site I'll see little rectangles with hex codes defining unicode characters that can't be displayed. So I can't read the text. But I can't read Chinese, anyway. It's all Greek to me. I can't imagine why I'd want or need a Chinese font. The little boxes tell me what I need to know: This webpage will be of no use to me. I still find it informative whether I wind up on a site with Kanji, Cyrillic, or other lettering, even if I don't understand the language. It at least tells me who their primary audience is. Seeing squares with hex codes is not useful at all. In the days when a "large" HD was 20GB, font management was more of a concern than it is today. I can't really see any good reason to delete the default fonts on a computer. But, I think this has more to do with how one uses their computer than whether a general recommendation can be made regarding such things. Being that these are "personal computers", one can do with them as they wish. -- best regards, Neil |
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#17
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Synchronizing fonts
On 2/25/17 7:54 AM, Neil wrote:
On 2/23/2017 5:46 PM, Mayayana wrote: "Neil" wrote | I'm only going to remove fonts not based on roman/Latin/western | characters. Neither do I plan on removing any dingbat/graphic fonts. | Since I don't read, write, or speak any Asian language, I do not need | those fonts. Same for Cyrillic. | | You may not use them when you create documents, but if you wind up on a | website that uses them, you're going to see a mess. Only the commonly | used fonts in other languages are supplied with the OS. | I don't have any such fonts and it's not a problem. If I'm at a Chinese site I'll see little rectangles with hex codes defining unicode characters that can't be displayed. So I can't read the text. But I can't read Chinese, anyway. It's all Greek to me. I can't imagine why I'd want or need a Chinese font. The little boxes tell me what I need to know: This webpage will be of no use to me. I still find it informative whether I wind up on a site with Kanji, Cyrillic, or other lettering, even if I don't understand the language. It at least tells me who their primary audience is. Seeing squares with hex codes is not useful at all. In the days when a "large" HD was 20GB, font management was more of a concern than it is today. I can't really see any good reason to delete the default fonts on a computer. So, you're in your favorite word processor, and you want to select a different font. Do you want to scroll through 50 fonts or 150 fonts, when you know you'll never use 100 of those fonts since you don't need/use Cyrillic or Asian fonts? Personally, I get tired of having to deal with the fonts I'll never use. Then there's consistency for your own docs. You have two computers, one is Windows 7, the other is Windows 10. You use a font in the doc you created in Windows 7. Then you take the doc to Windows 10 and... WHOA!!! That font is not on that machine... G Yes, you could embed the fonts (I do when that is an option), but what if the program you used does not offer font embedding, or you just forgot to do it? Or... You use the font FloppyShoes in your file on Windows 7, and go to Windows 10 which also has the font FloppyShoes. But the font files used are not identical, and on Windows 10 things look just a little bit off. But, I think this has more to do with how one uses their computer than whether a general recommendation can be made regarding such things. Being that these are "personal computers", one can do with them as they wish. Exactly. I use different computers and OSes depending on what I need to accomplish. Occasionally, using more than one for the same project. So I want to know that whatever font I use on System A will be there on System C if I use System C for that project. When I want to send this file to someone, it goes as a PDF with the fonts embedded. That way it doesn't matter what software is installed on the recipient's computer, it will look just as I intended it to look. -- Ken Mac OS X 10.11.6 Firefox 51.0.1 (64 bit) Thunderbird 45.7.1 "My brain is like lightning, a quick flash and it's gone!" |
#18
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Synchronizing fonts
"Ken Springer" wrote
| So, you're in your favorite word processor, and you want to select a | different font. Do you want to scroll through 50 fonts or 150 fonts, | when you know you'll never use 100 of those fonts since you don't | need/use Cyrillic or Asian fonts? Personally, I get tired of having to | deal with the fonts I'll never use. | I feel the same way. I like to collect interesting fonts. There's no room for debris. When I do something like create a birthday card for a friend I want only a good selection of "atmosphere" fonts to choose from. (Wedding invitation, brush calligraphy, art nouveau, and various other styles.) I have a backup folder of Win7 fonts -- 327 MB. I've got another 40 MB of interesting style fonts. I'll add any style font that looks good, but have no reason to keep other fonts. |
#19
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Synchronizing fonts
On Sat, 25 Feb 2017 11:52:05 -0700, Ken Springer
wrote: So, you're in your favorite word processor, and you want to select a different font. Do you want to scroll through 50 fonts or 150 fonts, when you know you'll never use 100 of those fonts since you don't need/use Cyrillic or Asian fonts? I just checked. I have 270 fonts installed. These are all fonts that I chose to have installed. Yes that's a lot, and only rarely do I use more than a dozen or so of them. But WordPerfect (my favorite word processor) keeps the fonts I most commonly used at the top of the list, so very rarely do I have to scroll at all. I also checked in Microsoft Word 2016, which I have installed but very rarely use; it does the same thing. There are undoubtedly some fonts there I've never used and never will use, but having those that I think I *might* use some day has such a small penalty that I'm not inclined to remove any. Personally, I get tired of having to deal with the fonts I'll never use. I don't know word processor you use, but if it's WordPerfect or Word, dealing with many fonts is very easy. Then there's consistency for your own docs. You have two computers, one is Windows 7, the other is Windows 10. You use a font in the doc you created in Windows 7. Then you take the doc to Windows 10 and... WHOA!!! That font is not on that machine... G Yes, that could be an issue, but they don't even have to be two different Windows versions. Two computers running the same version of Windows can have different fonts installed. But I have only one computer, so I have no issue like that. My wife has her own computer, and it doesn't have all the fonts mine does, but I very rarely give her a document from my computer, and if I do, it's highly unlikely to have any fonts other than Times New Roman and Arial. And ditto if she sends me a document. But, I think this has more to do with how one uses their computer than whether a general recommendation can be made regarding such things. Being that these are "personal computers", one can do with them as they wish. Exactly. I use different computers and OSes depending on what I need to accomplish. Understood. But I don't, and that's why what's important to you isn't to me. When I want to send this file to someone, it goes as a PDF with the fonts embedded. That way it doesn't matter what software is installed on the recipient's computer, it will look just as I intended it to look. Same here, but doing that is very rare for me. |
#20
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Synchronizing fonts
On 2/25/2017 11:16 AM, Mayayana wrote:
"Ken Springer" wrote | So, you're in your favorite word processor, and you want to select a | different font. Do you want to scroll through 50 fonts or 150 fonts, | when you know you'll never use 100 of those fonts since you don't | need/use Cyrillic or Asian fonts? Personally, I get tired of having to | deal with the fonts I'll never use. | I feel the same way. I like to collect interesting fonts. There's no room for debris. When I do something like create a birthday card for a friend I want only a good selection of "atmosphere" fonts to choose from. (Wedding invitation, brush calligraphy, art nouveau, and various other styles.) I have a backup folder of Win7 fonts -- 327 MB. I've got another 40 MB of interesting style fonts. I'll add any style font that looks good, but have no reason to keep other fonts. Although most of the applications on my PC are freeware, I actually bought High-Logic's Main Type font manager. It allows me to disable or enable fonts. Disabled fonts do not appear in the font list used by Word, Excel, etc. It also allows me to delete or export fonts. I have 445 enabled fonts and 515 disabled fonts. Many of the disabled fonts are earlier versions of the enabled fonts. Those duplicates I am gradually deleting from my PC, but I do that very carefully to ensure that (1) the duplicate is indeed an earlier version and (2) I am not deleting a font with broad embedding while keeping a font with limited embedding. -- David E. Ross http://www.rossde.com/ Paraphrasing Mark Twain, who was quoting someone else: There are three kinds of lies: lies, damned lies, and alternative truths. |
#21
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Synchronizing fonts
On 2/25/2017 1:52 PM, Ken Springer wrote:
On 2/25/17 7:54 AM, Neil wrote: On 2/23/2017 5:46 PM, Mayayana wrote: "Neil" wrote | I'm only going to remove fonts not based on roman/Latin/western | characters. Neither do I plan on removing any dingbat/graphic fonts. | Since I don't read, write, or speak any Asian language, I do not need | those fonts. Same for Cyrillic. | | You may not use them when you create documents, but if you wind up on a | website that uses them, you're going to see a mess. Only the commonly | used fonts in other languages are supplied with the OS. | I don't have any such fonts and it's not a problem. If I'm at a Chinese site I'll see little rectangles with hex codes defining unicode characters that can't be displayed. So I can't read the text. But I can't read Chinese, anyway. It's all Greek to me. I can't imagine why I'd want or need a Chinese font. The little boxes tell me what I need to know: This webpage will be of no use to me. I still find it informative whether I wind up on a site with Kanji, Cyrillic, or other lettering, even if I don't understand the language. It at least tells me who their primary audience is. Seeing squares with hex codes is not useful at all. In the days when a "large" HD was 20GB, font management was more of a concern than it is today. I can't really see any good reason to delete the default fonts on a computer. So, you're in your favorite word processor, and you want to select a different font. Do you want to scroll through 50 fonts or 150 fonts, when you know you'll never use 100 of those fonts since you don't need/use Cyrillic or Asian fonts? Personally, I get tired of having to deal with the fonts I'll never use. Then there's consistency for your own docs. You have two computers, one is Windows 7, the other is Windows 10. You use a font in the doc you created in Windows 7. Then you take the doc to Windows 10 and... WHOA!!! That font is not on that machine... G Yes, you could embed the fonts (I do when that is an option), but what if the program you used does not offer font embedding, or you just forgot to do it? Or... You use the font FloppyShoes in your file on Windows 7, and go to Windows 10 which also has the font FloppyShoes. But the font files used are not identical, and on Windows 10 things look just a little bit off. There are other ways to solve these issues, and the way you've chosen presumes a few things about fonts that may not be so. I mostly use professional fonts, because I'm more concerned with how my documents look when they've been offset printed abroad and I can't worry about OS issues. It requires that I avoid most of the system fonts, which is not a big deal. But, again, I'm not suggesting that you do anything different than whatever it is you wish to do on your computer. But, I think this has more to do with how one uses their computer than whether a general recommendation can be made regarding such things. Being that these are "personal computers", one can do with them as they wish. Exactly. I use different computers and OSes depending on what I need to accomplish. Occasionally, using more than one for the same project. So I want to know that whatever font I use on System A will be there on System C if I use System C for that project. When I want to send this file to someone, it goes as a PDF with the fonts embedded. That way it doesn't matter what software is installed on the recipient's computer, it will look just as I intended it to look. On a certain level that usually works. But I wouldn't trust it blindly. BTDT. -- best regards, Neil |
#22
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Synchronizing fonts
On 2/25/2017 2:32 PM, David E. Ross wrote:
On 2/25/2017 11:16 AM, Mayayana wrote: "Ken Springer" wrote | So, you're in your favorite word processor, and you want to select a | different font. Do you want to scroll through 50 fonts or 150 fonts, | when you know you'll never use 100 of those fonts since you don't | need/use Cyrillic or Asian fonts? Personally, I get tired of having to | deal with the fonts I'll never use. | I feel the same way. I like to collect interesting fonts. There's no room for debris. When I do something like create a birthday card for a friend I want only a good selection of "atmosphere" fonts to choose from. (Wedding invitation, brush calligraphy, art nouveau, and various other styles.) I have a backup folder of Win7 fonts -- 327 MB. I've got another 40 MB of interesting style fonts. I'll add any style font that looks good, but have no reason to keep other fonts. Although most of the applications on my PC are freeware, I actually bought High-Logic's Main Type font manager. It allows me to disable or enable fonts. Disabled fonts do not appear in the font list used by Word, Excel, etc. It also allows me to delete or export fonts. I have 445 enabled fonts and 515 disabled fonts. Many of the disabled fonts are earlier versions of the enabled fonts. Those duplicates I am gradually deleting from my PC, but I do that very carefully to ensure that (1) the duplicate is indeed an earlier version and (2) I am not deleting a font with broad embedding while keeping a font with limited embedding. This is a much more reliable approach if you have to distribute your documents for printing elsewhere. If one is creating many documents that will have the same general appearance, it's also possible to create templates with styles that use those fonts as well as typographic specifications. This can save a lot of time when working with clients' corporate styles. -- best regards, Neil |
#23
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Synchronizing fonts
On 2/25/17 1:37 PM, Neil wrote:
On 2/25/2017 2:32 PM, David E. Ross wrote: On 2/25/2017 11:16 AM, Mayayana wrote: "Ken Springer" wrote | So, you're in your favorite word processor, and you want to select a | different font. Do you want to scroll through 50 fonts or 150 fonts, | when you know you'll never use 100 of those fonts since you don't | need/use Cyrillic or Asian fonts? Personally, I get tired of having to | deal with the fonts I'll never use. | I feel the same way. I like to collect interesting fonts. There's no room for debris. When I do something like create a birthday card for a friend I want only a good selection of "atmosphere" fonts to choose from. (Wedding invitation, brush calligraphy, art nouveau, and various other styles.) I have a backup folder of Win7 fonts -- 327 MB. I've got another 40 MB of interesting style fonts. I'll add any style font that looks good, but have no reason to keep other fonts. Although most of the applications on my PC are freeware, I actually bought High-Logic's Main Type font manager. It allows me to disable or enable fonts. Disabled fonts do not appear in the font list used by Word, Excel, etc. It also allows me to delete or export fonts. I have 445 enabled fonts and 515 disabled fonts. Many of the disabled fonts are earlier versions of the enabled fonts. Those duplicates I am gradually deleting from my PC, but I do that very carefully to ensure that (1) the duplicate is indeed an earlier version and (2) I am not deleting a font with broad embedding while keeping a font with limited embedding. This is a much more reliable approach if you have to distribute your documents for printing elsewhere. If one is creating many documents that will have the same general appearance, it's also possible to create templates with styles that use those fonts as well as typographic specifications. This can save a lot of time when working with clients' corporate styles. Not using templates and styles is one of my pet peeves with a lot of people who say they know how to use a computer. But unless you embed the fonts in document, templates won't solve the entire problem. And as I think I mentioned, not all software embeds fonts. I read a long time ago, if you use a purchased/copyrighted/proprietary font, embedding may be illegal. -- Ken Mac OS X 10.11.6 Firefox 51.0.1 (64 bit) Thunderbird 45.7.1 "My brain is like lightning, a quick flash and it's gone!" |
#24
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Synchronizing fonts
On 2/25/17 12:25 PM, Ken Blake wrote:
On Sat, 25 Feb 2017 11:52:05 -0700, Ken Springer wrote: snip But WordPerfect (my favorite word processor) keeps the fonts I most commonly used at the top of the list, so very rarely do I have to scroll at all. I also checked in Microsoft Word 2016, which I have installed but very rarely use; it does the same thing. Are you sure the list is the fonts you often use, or just the fonts used with that document or in that session of WordPerfect or Word? I know I've sometimes opened a new Word document and wished a particular font was at the top, but the top is devoid of any font previously used. snip I don't know word processor you use, but if it's WordPerfect or Word, dealing with many fonts is very easy. At the moment, it depends on the project. A project for me, when in Windows 7, is Softmaker Office 2016 or Page Plus. If it's for the computer shop I work at part time, regardless of system, it's Libre Office or Scribus. All the other systems are Libre Office or Scribus. Then there's consistency for your own docs. You have two computers, one is Windows 7, the other is Windows 10. You use a font in the doc you created in Windows 7. Then you take the doc to Windows 10 and... WHOA!!! That font is not on that machine... G Yes, that could be an issue, but they don't even have to be two different Windows versions. Two computers running the same version of Windows can have different fonts installed. I've never noticed this for the fonts installed by the OS, but other software sometimes adds fonts. But I have only one computer, so I have no issue like that. My wife has her own computer, and it doesn't have all the fonts mine does, but I very rarely give her a document from my computer, and if I do, it's highly unlikely to have any fonts other than Times New Roman and Arial. And ditto if she sends me a document. I long ago ditched using Times New Roman. I would get lengthy docs from places I found hard to read. Then, while delving into typography, I read that the design of Times New Roman was such that in "normal" font sizes, the design of the font can be tiring on your eyes. The articles said there are a lot of better alternatives. Personally, I like the Linux Libertine fonts, they are complete with the ligatures, etc., and available in both True Type and Open Type fonts. snip -- Ken Mac OS X 10.11.6 Firefox 51.0.1 (64 bit) Thunderbird 45.7.1 "My brain is like lightning, a quick flash and it's gone!" |
#25
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Synchronizing fonts
On 2/25/17 1:33 PM, Neil wrote:
On 2/25/2017 1:52 PM, Ken Springer wrote: On 2/25/17 7:54 AM, Neil wrote: On 2/23/2017 5:46 PM, Mayayana wrote: "Neil" wrote | I'm only going to remove fonts not based on roman/Latin/western | characters. Neither do I plan on removing any dingbat/graphic fonts. | Since I don't read, write, or speak any Asian language, I do not need | those fonts. Same for Cyrillic. | | You may not use them when you create documents, but if you wind up on a | website that uses them, you're going to see a mess. Only the commonly | used fonts in other languages are supplied with the OS. | I don't have any such fonts and it's not a problem. If I'm at a Chinese site I'll see little rectangles with hex codes defining unicode characters that can't be displayed. So I can't read the text. But I can't read Chinese, anyway. It's all Greek to me. I can't imagine why I'd want or need a Chinese font. The little boxes tell me what I need to know: This webpage will be of no use to me. I still find it informative whether I wind up on a site with Kanji, Cyrillic, or other lettering, even if I don't understand the language. It at least tells me who their primary audience is. Seeing squares with hex codes is not useful at all. In the days when a "large" HD was 20GB, font management was more of a concern than it is today. I can't really see any good reason to delete the default fonts on a computer. So, you're in your favorite word processor, and you want to select a different font. Do you want to scroll through 50 fonts or 150 fonts, when you know you'll never use 100 of those fonts since you don't need/use Cyrillic or Asian fonts? Personally, I get tired of having to deal with the fonts I'll never use. Then there's consistency for your own docs. You have two computers, one is Windows 7, the other is Windows 10. You use a font in the doc you created in Windows 7. Then you take the doc to Windows 10 and... WHOA!!! That font is not on that machine... G Yes, you could embed the fonts (I do when that is an option), but what if the program you used does not offer font embedding, or you just forgot to do it? Or... You use the font FloppyShoes in your file on Windows 7, and go to Windows 10 which also has the font FloppyShoes. But the font files used are not identical, and on Windows 10 things look just a little bit off. There are other ways to solve these issues, and the way you've chosen presumes a few things about fonts that may not be so. I mostly use professional fonts, because I'm more concerned with how my documents look when they've been offset printed abroad and I can't worry about OS issues. It requires that I avoid most of the system fonts, which is not a big deal. But, again, I'm not suggesting that you do anything different than whatever it is you wish to do on your computer. I don't have a reason for professional fonts anymore, but I do own a disk of Bitstream fonts from years ago. But I do need to have things match across my computers, and the Linux Libertine fonts I mentioned to Ken Blake on the work computers. But, I think this has more to do with how one uses their computer than whether a general recommendation can be made regarding such things. Being that these are "personal computers", one can do with them as they wish. Exactly. I use different computers and OSes depending on what I need to accomplish. Occasionally, using more than one for the same project. So I want to know that whatever font I use on System A will be there on System C if I use System C for that project. When I want to send this file to someone, it goes as a PDF with the fonts embedded. That way it doesn't matter what software is installed on the recipient's computer, it will look just as I intended it to look. On a certain level that usually works. But I wouldn't trust it blindly. BTDT. But it's the best the average person can do at the moment, AFAIK. -- Ken Mac OS X 10.11.6 Firefox 51.0.1 (64 bit) Thunderbird 45.7.1 "My brain is like lightning, a quick flash and it's gone!" |
#26
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Synchronizing fonts
On 2/25/2017 5:24 PM, Ken Springer wrote:
On 2/25/17 1:37 PM, Neil wrote: On 2/25/2017 2:32 PM, David E. Ross wrote: On 2/25/2017 11:16 AM, Mayayana wrote: "Ken Springer" wrote | So, you're in your favorite word processor, and you want to select a | different font. Do you want to scroll through 50 fonts or 150 fonts, | when you know you'll never use 100 of those fonts since you don't | need/use Cyrillic or Asian fonts? Personally, I get tired of having to | deal with the fonts I'll never use. | I feel the same way. I like to collect interesting fonts. There's no room for debris. When I do something like create a birthday card for a friend I want only a good selection of "atmosphere" fonts to choose from. (Wedding invitation, brush calligraphy, art nouveau, and various other styles.) I have a backup folder of Win7 fonts -- 327 MB. I've got another 40 MB of interesting style fonts. I'll add any style font that looks good, but have no reason to keep other fonts. Although most of the applications on my PC are freeware, I actually bought High-Logic's Main Type font manager. It allows me to disable or enable fonts. Disabled fonts do not appear in the font list used by Word, Excel, etc. It also allows me to delete or export fonts. I have 445 enabled fonts and 515 disabled fonts. Many of the disabled fonts are earlier versions of the enabled fonts. Those duplicates I am gradually deleting from my PC, but I do that very carefully to ensure that (1) the duplicate is indeed an earlier version and (2) I am not deleting a font with broad embedding while keeping a font with limited embedding. This is a much more reliable approach if you have to distribute your documents for printing elsewhere. If one is creating many documents that will have the same general appearance, it's also possible to create templates with styles that use those fonts as well as typographic specifications. This can save a lot of time when working with clients' corporate styles. Not using templates and styles is one of my pet peeves with a lot of people who say they know how to use a computer. But unless you embed the fonts in document, templates won't solve the entire problem. And as I think I mentioned, not all software embeds fonts. I read a long time ago, if you use a purchased/copyrighted/proprietary font, embedding may be illegal. Those are separate issues. Templates don't make documents portable, they make it easier to manage font usage in-house. In the case of corporate styles, the clients are already using the same fonts, so that becomes a non-issue. Worked well for me for over three decades. -- best regards, Neil |
#27
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Synchronizing fonts
On 2/25/17 7:02 PM, Neil wrote:
On 2/25/2017 5:24 PM, Ken Springer wrote: On 2/25/17 1:37 PM, Neil wrote: On 2/25/2017 2:32 PM, David E. Ross wrote: On 2/25/2017 11:16 AM, Mayayana wrote: "Ken Springer" wrote | So, you're in your favorite word processor, and you want to select a | different font. Do you want to scroll through 50 fonts or 150 fonts, | when you know you'll never use 100 of those fonts since you don't | need/use Cyrillic or Asian fonts? Personally, I get tired of having to | deal with the fonts I'll never use. | I feel the same way. I like to collect interesting fonts. There's no room for debris. When I do something like create a birthday card for a friend I want only a good selection of "atmosphere" fonts to choose from. (Wedding invitation, brush calligraphy, art nouveau, and various other styles.) I have a backup folder of Win7 fonts -- 327 MB. I've got another 40 MB of interesting style fonts. I'll add any style font that looks good, but have no reason to keep other fonts. Although most of the applications on my PC are freeware, I actually bought High-Logic's Main Type font manager. It allows me to disable or enable fonts. Disabled fonts do not appear in the font list used by Word, Excel, etc. It also allows me to delete or export fonts. I have 445 enabled fonts and 515 disabled fonts. Many of the disabled fonts are earlier versions of the enabled fonts. Those duplicates I am gradually deleting from my PC, but I do that very carefully to ensure that (1) the duplicate is indeed an earlier version and (2) I am not deleting a font with broad embedding while keeping a font with limited embedding. This is a much more reliable approach if you have to distribute your documents for printing elsewhere. If one is creating many documents that will have the same general appearance, it's also possible to create templates with styles that use those fonts as well as typographic specifications. This can save a lot of time when working with clients' corporate styles. Not using templates and styles is one of my pet peeves with a lot of people who say they know how to use a computer. But unless you embed the fonts in document, templates won't solve the entire problem. And as I think I mentioned, not all software embeds fonts. I read a long time ago, if you use a purchased/copyrighted/proprietary font, embedding may be illegal. Those are separate issues. Templates don't make documents portable, they make it easier to manage font usage in-house. In the case of corporate styles, the clients are already using the same fonts, so that becomes a non-issue. Worked well for me for over three decades. Or even in a small PC repair shop such as where I work. -- Ken Mac OS X 10.11.6 Firefox 51.0.1 (64 bit) Thunderbird 45.7.1 "My brain is like lightning, a quick flash and it's gone!" |
#28
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Synchronizing fonts
On Sat, 25 Feb 2017 15:45:50 -0700, Ken Springer
wrote: On 2/25/17 12:25 PM, Ken Blake wrote: On Sat, 25 Feb 2017 11:52:05 -0700, Ken Springer wrote: snip But WordPerfect (my favorite word processor) keeps the fonts I most commonly used at the top of the list, so very rarely do I have to scroll at all. I also checked in Microsoft Word 2016, which I have installed but very rarely use; it does the same thing. Are you sure the list is the fonts you often use, or just the fonts used with that document or in that session of WordPerfect or Word? I'm not sure, but it hardly matters. What I probably want is there. |
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