Ihave hundreds of documents that are using the Century Gothic font. When I open a new document from a current document that is using Century Gothic it opens with Century Gothic as that is the default I set in settings (see screenshot).
HOWEVER . . . when I try to open a new document directly from the app, Century Gothic is nowhere to be found in the dropdown nor is it in the Font Book. How can this be? As I noted above, I can pick it when opening a new document from an existing document!
Century Gothic is one of those fonts that Apple does not install with the operating system, but will download to documents already using Century Gothic. It falls into the category Document Support Font.
If you want Century Gothic installed and available on the Pages font menu, then I suggest you download the free Century Gothic family members you want from here, and then drag/drop them into your /Users/username/Library/Fonts folder where the operating system and Pages will detect them.
I suppose the default font setting for Mac used by qt toolkit still stays with "AppleGothic". Can you change the default Korean font setting (for all Mac) from "AppleGothic" to "AppleSDGothicNeo"? "AppleGothic" may stay but the preference should be lowered I believe.
Their primary font on presentations is Century Gothic. I have it on every other program on this machine, but not in Layout. I need to find a version of this font I can use in Layout, on a Mac. I believe it works fine on my PC at home.
The malfunctioning Korean text is not highlighted in pink, the way it appears when one doesn't *have* the selected font. Instead it's appearing as boxes. YuGothic appears in my dropbox list of fonts as an Open Type font, just like YuMincho and PingFang do.
I don't know YuGothic, but if I toss that term into Google the top link identifies it as Japanese font. Not all Japanese fonts have Korean glyphs. You should try marking it as Malgun Gothic (if on Windows) or as AppleGothic (if on Mac) and see if it renders then.
Also: PingMing is a Chinese font. And since it's supposedly a new Chinese font for macOS (or maybe iOS? or both? I can't tell), then I now know which platform you are on and can guide you to additional Hangul font choices if you need assistance with that.
Kozuka is a Japanese font, which means that it shares many Chinese forms ("kanji") with Korean, but I wouldn't count on it including all the chars. in Korean hangul. I don't know about CC versions, but older Western-language versions of InDesign didn't come with the attributes for CJK languages built-in. However, the first time you import a word-processor file containing text set to Chinese, Japanese or Korean it would pick up that attribute and make it available thereafter.
Well, with Adobe you get Adobe Myungjo and Adobe Gothic. Not exciting, but reliable. From macOS you should also have Apple SD Gothic Neo, with a pretty wide array of weights. Also you get a series of "Nanum" fonts including a brush script and a pen script. If you scroll down in your font list in ID to the place where Korean fonts are housed, you will almost certainly find some more.
I'm creating a website of a friend of mine. He really likes the font "Century Gothic". Now I'm having hard time figuring out what is legal to use and what not etc. I tried googling it but the more I google the more complex and less clear the issue becomes to me. So I've got two questions.
Can I use the font on the website using the @font-family rule? Like I found on a website like this: font-family: "Century Gothic","Apple Gothic",AppleGothic,"URW Gothic L","Avant Garde",Futura,sans-serif;
font-family is the first example you give, which will cause the browser to search for the typeface on the visitor's machine and proceeding with the next font when failing. This is also called a 'font stack'.
@font-face is a way of embedding a font file into a website, in order to render it on machines that don't have it installed themselves. This embedding includes a publicly available copy of the font file on the site, which is against all but the most liberal (read: free and rights-free) licenses.
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Century Gothic is generally considered a web-safe font. Could you provide some additional information, specifically regarding what inbox providers the subscribers who are seeing Arial are using? Do you have any screenshots you can share? (Please be careful not to include any of your API keys or customer data.)
Currently, Gmail is not an email client that fully supports custom fonts. You can find all of the email clients that do support custom fonts in my last reply. You can also find more information in Klaviyo's documentation on using custom fonts.
we were not able to solve one issue: being able to display our custom fonts due to am OS not supporting a typeface. Is there a way to use custom code to embed typefaces/ our host typefaces on a server and override the fallback font necessity on an OS? or any possible solution through code to help us rectify this issue?
The fonts presented on this website are their authors' property, and are either freeware, shareware, demo versions or public domain. The licence mentioned above the download button is just an indication. Please look at the readme-files in the archives or check the indicated author's website for details, and contact him/her if in doubt. If no author/licence is indicated that's because we don't have information, that doesn't mean it's free.
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Does anyone know why my StudioPress theme is putting a huge space after an apostrophe? It only happens after a number, not a letter. For example 1's will produce something that looks like this 1' s.
However, it doesn't happen after a letter.
I've changed the font face. I've looked at it in both chrome and safari. And it doesn't happen if I use the default theme on the StudioPress theme. I have the "Pretty Young Thing" theme installed. This is driving me NUTS. I've tried going in a replacing the apostrophe with the HTML code (not desirable); but of course WordPress just converts it right back to the apostrophe, so no joy there either. Except for changing themes, I'm at a loss here.
Hi Sridhar, i appreciate your help. But this isn't the way I'm typing the apostrophe, its the way the theme is rendering what has been typed. I have come to discover that it is only happening in "Pretty Young Thing" theme. I have created some screen shots that show what I'm talking about. It is only in the PYT theme where the apostrophe spacing is a problem and only when the apostrophe is typed after a number.
Yes, I realize technically the solution is to just use the entity number or name. HOWEVER, I have a few problems with that. First, its a PITA to remember to do this each and every time. Secondly, I shouldn't have to. Also, if I inadvertently go from TEXT edit to HTML edit, WordPress strips out the entity number or entity name and replaces it with the same apostrophe I'd type with my keyboard...and I'm right back where I started.
Thanks Dev...that was the problem. When I first installed the theme and noticed the problem I DID change the font. Lato was not the font that came with the theme originally. So I tried changing it but to no avail. I suppose I never tried Arial. I can imagine that would be the case since I don't like Arial. But I guess I'm stuck with it for now if I keep this theme. It's the darndest thing. I have several blogs that use Google fonts and Genesis themes. i've even got another one that uses Lato. But this is the first time I've ever noticed this happening with the apostrophe's.
Dev, Again thank you for your help. I just want Support to understand that the problem with the apostrophe is happening with the Century Gothic...which is the DEFAULT font coded in the CSS for this theme.
I changed it to Lato trying to fix the problem. I tried a few fonts, but none work. I've used Lato on a few blogs and have never had this problem. I've changed it back to the default CSS in case anyone wants to see it. Here is the test page that shows the kerning problem.
Eamon, I don't want to slice hairs with you. But a few things...yes, you are being pedantic and not really helping to solve the problem. But no matter. I get you. Really I do. My husband can be very similar and just can't help himself. I've learned to ignore him as it prevents a lot of arguments. LOL
Secondly, although dates like 1950s or 50s are not typed with an apostrophe, I believe that numbers like 1, 2, 3, 4 can go either way. Maybe not absolutely correct...I think it is easier to read and comprehend the meaning. Heck, even Destiny's Child and Mariah Carey named an album #1's. LOL
Besides, the woman who "invented" the system I'm writing about types it that way. There is a community of thousands and thousands of people who type it that way. So in order to be more easily understood (grammatically correct or incorrect), I'm typing it that way.
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