Mystery solved. It ended up being file corruption of the stylesheet I was 
using. When I reverted to a previous version, the problem went away.

Regards,
Jeff

________________________________
From: Bob Stayton [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: 2012-03-13 10:42
To: Jeff Powanda; [email protected]
Subject: Re: [docbook-apps] WARNING: Glyph "?" (0xfffd) not available in font 
"Frutiger-LightItalic".

Hi Jeff,
This is a bit of a mystery.  The Unicode character xFFFD is the Replacement 
Character, which the Unicode standard says is "used to replace an incoming 
character whose value is unknown or unrepresentable in Unicode".  You won't 
find that character in the DocBook stylesheets, nor will you find it any font.

I see that character in the edit window of the UniPad editor sometimes, but I 
don't think that character is actually in the file. It usually represents a 
mismatch between the encoding and the bytes in the file.

The footer content with a separator character that you describe is not the 
stock footer, because it does not display any heading.  I presume that footer 
is coming from your customization layer. What does that look like?  Have you 
taken a peek inside the FO output to see what character is in the file?

When you upgraded from DocBook 4.5 to 5.0, did you also start using the 
namespaced version of the stylesheets?  I'm trying to figure out what exactly 
changed here.

Bob Stayton
Sagehill Enterprises
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>


----- Original Message -----
From: Jeff Powanda<mailto:[email protected]>
To: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Sent: Tuesday, March 13, 2012 7:01 PM
Subject: [docbook-apps] WARNING: Glyph "?" (0xfffd) not available in font 
"Frutiger-LightItalic".


When I upgraded from DocBook 4.5 to 5.0, I noticed that I get this font warning 
when I build using FOP. I haven't changed the version of FOP or the fonts on my 
system.

The glyph in question is used as a separator character between the page number 
and heading in the footer. However, I can't find anywhere in the DocBook 
stylesheets where this separator character is defined. Can anyone help me find 
it so that I adjust the font for that charactter accordingly?

Regards,
Jeff

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