On Thu, 7 Feb 2008, Bill Swallow wrote:
Hey, how'd I get in the subject line??? ;-)
I agree that blowing out the text in MIF is drastic, though it'll
definitely solve the problem. Editing the MIF to replace the offending
font name with another one is a better route. Still, the 'remember
Hey, how'd I get in the subject line??? ;-)
I agree that blowing out the text in MIF is drastic, though it'll
definitely solve the problem. Editing the MIF to replace the offending
font name with another one is a better route. Still, the 'remember
missing font names' quick fix will work to
Framers digest..."
>
>
>Today's Topics:
>
>1. Internal Error (Shmuel Wolfson)
>2. Re: Revising Help topics created in WebWorks (Yves Barbion)
>3. RE: Working with Images (richard.melanson at us.tel.com)
>4. RE: Working with Images (Dennis Brunnenmeyer)
&g
Miriam Boral wrote:
> Save the offending file as .mif and then open the .mif file with a
> text editor to view the underlying code. Search for the missing font
> and delete the text that uses it. Save the file and then
> resave as .fm.
>
> This is the only foolproof solution I've found!
That
Hey, how'd I get in the subject line??? ;-)
I agree that blowing out the text in MIF is drastic, though it'll
definitely solve the problem. Editing the MIF to replace the offending
font name with another one is a better route. Still, the 'remember
missing font names' quick fix will work to
On Thu, 7 Feb 2008, Bill Swallow wrote:
> Hey, how'd I get in the subject line??? ;-)
>
> I agree that blowing out the text in MIF is drastic, though it'll
> definitely solve the problem. Editing the MIF to replace the offending
> font name with another one is a better route. Still, the 'remember
I'm trying to make a PDF version of a book. Just one file, the title
page, causes a problem about using unavailable fonts, which makes the
PDF operation fail. When I open the title page file, I change all the
text to a font that's available, then save and close the file. But when
I reopen it, I
1. File Preferences General
2. Deselect remember missing font names
3. Open the file.
4. Click OK to font substitutions.
5. Save and close the file.
On Feb 6, 2008 3:10 PM, Brewster, Christopher C
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'm trying to make a PDF version of a book. Just one file, the title
I'm trying to make a PDF version of a book. Just one file, the title
page, causes a problem about using unavailable fonts, which makes the
PDF operation fail. When I open the title page file, I change all the
text to a font that's available, then save and close the file. But when
I reopen it, I
1. File > Preferences > General
2. Deselect "remember missing font names"
3. Open the file.
4. Click OK to font substitutions.
5. Save and close the file.
On Feb 6, 2008 3:10 PM, Brewster, Christopher C
wrote:
> I'm trying to make a PDF version of a book. Just one file, the title
> page, causes
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