And sorry for probably a stupid question, which might have been asked already many times - but I've been trying to find the answer for about two or three hours myself, but it didn't work out. So I decided to ask the question here.
So my question is - when should I specify the format?This case shows that "format" property is not always required to make things work.But if this proeprty exists, it must be needed in some cases, right?Could you help me please?
It also worked even when you didn't specify it because the web uses WOFFor WOFF 2.0 which basically were built on truetype and it's the most common font format for both the Mac OS and Microsoft Windows operating systems.
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I really like how Babylon.js GUI works in general and I feel like it would make sense if a GUI element could inherit font family from parents and If nothing is set, then potentially inherit from any relevant css? what are your thoughts?
Don't use \fontspec. It is a command to change locally to another font and its settings will be lost if you switch fonts. If you want to setup the overall document font you should use the optional argument of \setmainfont.
Hi, I am working on exactly this at the moment, but trying to solve it with a script which generates a file with the extra master that is needed in order to provide the variable font origin.
After exporting, you can use the app Slicer to create a subset variable font: -gui.netlify.app/
Sujith3021 Thank you very much, I was not aware that the link code was to be enveloped into the comment out! I have made the changes to my code and I am still getting the error when I run the test! So now what? I have everything as Sujith3021 has in his snipit and I still get the error!!??
This guy has been crystal clear in his explanation of the problem.
The only answer here is that it is the browser he is using, and yes he forgot to add the " , monospace; " to the element.
Therefore this should be made clear to the authors of that one particular test and if it could be fixed or a note added to it that the user may need to use chrome to pass the test instead of firefox.
Every last one of the challenges works just fine in Firefox BTW. Even Safari and Edge work well nowadays. The challenge tests are just really persnickety about how they test for a proper solution, and extra whitespace throws them off.
oh my gosh, you were the only answer that solved my problem! I had semi-colons separating the two fonts. That was my issue! I started to get scared because everyone was saying to use Chrome, which I already was using! Thank you!
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'font' alone can be used to describe all styles of a font at once, such as size, weight, family, if you use the shorthand method. But you can also style each of these individually by using font-size to style size, font-family to style the family such as Arial, sans serif, etc.
Hello ImJimmi. I work on the same project as Milos. Thank you so much for your answer ! So helpfull. At that point if we consider what you say the solution would be to find different otfs with different styles of the Bahnschrift font in it. However for the moment our search is not successfull. Do you know where we could find these otf ? Do you think we can use a font editor to split the styles ? If so, have you any recomandation on which editor we could use.
It ends up being a waste of your time to specify the fonts in PDF form fields within InDesign. Unless you specify something ubiquitous like Arial, your end user most likely won't have the font you specify.
if you do feel compelled (read that as being an "anal retentive control freak designer like me") to specify the font in the form fields, then do that in Acrobat, not InDesign. Select each field, right-click for Properties, and choose a font from the drop-down list in the Appearance tab. (You actually can select multiple form fields and set that property at once.)
The fonts that are above the separator line in Acrobat's form field properties list are special versions that Adobe supplies with all installations of Acrobat. All fonts below the separator line are only on your computer system, so don't use them in form fields.
I think in fact that ANY font you specify for a form field in Acrobat (but not in InDesign), including fonts below the line, are embedded into the PDF form, and any user will be able to see them and fill out their form with them, even if they don't have them installed on their system.
Now I modify the fonts.css file created in step 3. Each font-family name, needs to be changed to match the respective font-family name used in index.html. So in the instance of 'Roboto Light':
I tested this by uninstalling the Elsie fonts from my local PC, forcing it to use the web fonts, and it worked. Further confirmation was made when not making the manual changes to the font-family failed to load the Elsie font.
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This has been requested before but seems even more relevant since the advent of programmer monospace fonts with ligatures, few of which include an italic variation. In this case Sublime uses faux italics.
I am often cutting and pasting from Word, Excel or web pages into emails in TB. TB often does strange things with text that is copied into it, making the text much bigger or smaller and I can't figure out how to change it. While I understand how to change the font (through FormatFont), the resizing options are limited to x-small, small, medium, etc. (Screen shot attached.) My goal is to have the text I am copying match the size and font that I am using to compose the rest of the email, but I find that nearly impossible to do when my only options for size are x-small, small, medium, etc. Any suggestions?
I'd suggest you paste using "paste without formatting" (ctrl+shift+v, or on the Edit menu, or on the right-click context menu) so that the imported matter adopts and adapts to the resident default formatting.
Use of the Stationery add-on would allow you to define your styles in points, but I think it's misplaced effort. You have no say in what your correspondents use to view your messages, nor what personal preferences they apply, nor what limitations their devices assert. Trying to fix it with explicit point sizes is ultimately unhelpful to your correspondents. "Medium" means that they see the message at the size they want, not what you inflict on them.
You have no say in what your correspondents use to view your messages, nor what personal preferences they apply, nor what limitations their devices assert. Trying to fix it with explicit point sizes is ultimately unhelpful to your correspondents. "Medium" means that they see the message at the size they want, not what you inflict on them.
My usual response to queries about specific font sizes goes as follows; you send me a message, which I have been expecting and waiting for. When it arrives, I see it first on my phone, with its comparatively small screen, and in all likelihood, a limited choice of fonts, so possibly your message is displayed in a font other than what you had selected. I check it on my laptop which has something like a 14 inch screen. I take my laptop into a meeting where I can connect it to a projector and share your message with colleagues, where the screen might be well in excess of 1 m width.
I understand what you're saying and that makes sense. However, all I'm trying to do is to compose an email where the font and size of the text are consistent throughout the email I am writing. I suppose the paste without formatting will accomplish that.
I find myself that I need to set the display scaling in Windows to 125%, and even then, on a modern high resolution laptop, it's still too small to read comfortably. Making it any larger would result in some windows failing to fit inside the display. For ease of reading, I need to see it, in Windows, on a 23 inch display.
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