Not very sure if this is relavant, but I've tested with several fonts, and it seems to be fonts can be embedded as long as it is TrueType font. Problem is that when it is OpenType font, it seems to be having problem embedding. The above has tested with Japanese font, so this may not be completely the case, but I can certainly see the problem if your Indic font is OpenType font, and there is no replacement non-OpenType fonts available to display those text, this could be a problem...
---- CPHennessy, (2007/05/07 8:58): > On Monday 12 March 2007, + Mark Singleton wrote: > >> [ MODERATED ] *********************** >> Hello, I am using several Indic unicode fonts in my work and am having a >> few problems. First of all I'm not sure how to embed the True Type Fonts >> into a document (this is possible in Word). Second, when I convert the >> documents to pdf, the diacritical marks are corrupted, and sometimes I lose >> footnotes. Could you help me resolve these difficulties? >> >> The main fonts I am using is Palatino Induni, downloaded from >> http://bombay.indology.info/software/fonts/induni/index.html >> > > As you are not subscribed you may not have seen that: > On Monday 12 March 2007, Jim Allan wrote: > >> Unfortunately you cannot currently embed fonts into an OpenOffice.org >> document. (However you can save the document as a PDF and the fonts will >> be embedded in the PDF.) >> >> Second, if the PDF conversion is giving you problems, and you are using >> Windows, you might try printing through PDFCreator instead. PDFCreator >> is available at http://sourceforge.net/projects/pdfcreator/ for no cost. >> > > Please reply to [email protected] only. > > > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
