Sandra --

I greatly appreciate the tip, but I checked and indeed had already 
tried as you
suggested, to no avail.  I will ask my server administrator to try Christine
Davis' tip (apply Updaters 1 and 2) and see what happens...

-- LBA

Quoting Sandra Clark <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:

> Make sure your call to a stylesheet is within the <cfdocument> tags.
> Basically your entire layout.  I'm not sure how Acrobat handles <font or
> other obsolete tags, but it does handle most of CSS properly.
>
>
> Sandra Clark
> ==============================
> http://www.shayna.com
> Training in Cascading Style Sheets and Accessibility
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Wednesday, October 04, 2006 2:07 PM
> To: CF-Talk
> Subject: Re: Quicky question re: cfdocument and fonts
>
> Peter --
>
> Thanks for the idea, but I had also tried (prior to my original posting) the
> inline style stuff such as you suggested -- and got exactly the same result.
>
> Any other ideas?  There has to be some way to use cfdocument to generate a
> PDF with a font other than Times Roman...
>
> -- LBA
>
> Quoting Peter Boughton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
>
>> What about if you try using <span style="font: Whatever;">..</span> ?
>>
>>
>>> Howdy --
>>>
>>> I'm making my first use of cfdocument (no jokes about being behind
>>> the times, please -- I've been busy with other things), and it seems
>>> that no matter what I specify in the <font> tag inside the
>>> cfdocument, the resulting PDF displays the content in the same Times
>>> Roman font in whatever the default font size is (looks like about
>>> 12).  I tried lots of the different font faces listed on my CF
>>> Administrator's Font Management page, but I keep getting the same
>>> result.  Have also tried both "yes" and "no" fontembed settings,
>>> makes no difference.
>>> For that matter, I can't even get it to pay attention to <font
>>> size="whatever"> tags.  The size of the type in the PDF is properly
>>> affected by tags like <h1>, but <font> doesn't seem to be having any
>>> effect at all.
>>>
>>> I searched around a bit before writing this post, and I found a
>>> little bit of material alluding to there being some font problems
>>> with cfdocument in 7.0, but it wasn't clear to me that Updater 1
>>> really fixed it, as there seem to be some more recent hotfixes for
>>> the same problem.  I really couldn't find a good summary of the whole
>>> issue.
>>>
>>> Bottom line: I'm running MX 7 (version 7,0,0,91690 -- again, no jokes
>>> about behind the times; I believe in not fixing it if it ain't broke,
>>> but now it's broke) on Linux.  Can anybody tell me what I have to do
>>> to get my cfdocument-produced PDFs to pay attention to my <font>
>>> tags?
>>>
>>> -- Larry Afrin
>>
>>> Medical University of South Carolina
>>
>>> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>>
>>
>
>
>
> 

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