> > Suppose you have to work with a document or book that uses
>> fonts you do not have: you manually substitute fonts you do
>> have, *and* tell FrameMaker to forget the missing ones, to
>> get rid of all the irritating error messages.
>
>Well, you shouldn't have to manually substitute fonts. If
Steve Rickaby wrote:
> Suppose you have to work with a document or book that uses
> fonts you do not have: you manually substitute fonts you do
> have, *and* tell FrameMaker to forget the missing ones, to
> get rid of all the irritating error messages.
Well, you shouldn't have to manually
> > Suppose you have to work with a document or book that uses
>> fonts you do not have: you manually substitute fonts you do
>> have, *and* tell FrameMaker to forget the missing ones, to
>> get rid of all the irritating error messages.
>
>Well, you shouldn't have to manually substitute fonts. If
Steve Rickaby wrote:
> Suppose you have to work with a document or book that uses
> fonts you do not have: you manually substitute fonts you do
> have, *and* tell FrameMaker to forget the missing ones, to
> get rid of all the irritating error messages.
Well, you shouldn't have to manually s
I've just discovered something useful, although it's probably second nature to
a lot of you: FrameMaker can handle missing fonts as if they were actually
installed.
Suppose you have to work with a document or book that uses fonts you do not
have: you manually substitute fonts you do have, *and*