I'm sorry Juanita, but we can probably spend the whole day documenting and someone might still find some little detail missing. Everyone can easily find out what font is used for "any" by looking at the fonts list in Acrobat Reader's Document Properties dialog.
I'm going to add this missing piece to our documentation right now. BTW, "any" is not mapped to "Times New Roman", but to "Times Roman". I don't know if there's a difference between the two. Probably not, nowadays, since Adobe maps "Times Roman" to "Times New Roman" in recent versions of Acrobat Reader. They also map "Helvetica" to "Arial" and there definitely is a difference there. Jeremias Maerki On 08.11.2007 08:36:12 juanita wrote: > > Yes I do have control over the font family. > However I wanted to know what is happening if > the font family label stays empty.So it is replaced by default by Times New > Roman. > So when in the console I see something like Verdana not found, substituing > with > "any, 200, ...) this "any" is Times New Roman? > However I can't find anywhere in the Apache FOP page that the default font > is > Times New Roman... > > > > Jeremias Maerki-2 wrote: > > > > No, FOP uses Times. It has been so since I joined the project. Shrug. > > > > But you have control over the font-family property, right? > > > > Jeremias Maerki > > > > > > > > On 07.11.2007 15:50:22 juanita wrote: > >> > >> I have an .xsl file that creates a *.fo file and then there is the > >> generation > >> of pdf. > >> When I use a name for the font that does not exist in the configuration > >> file, the pdf is created with default font Times New Roman. Isn't > >> Helvetica > >> the default font for FOP? > >> I am using fop 0.94. --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
