YesI clicked on Generate Font Atlas and it shows the 0 characters. I just went back and tried it with the exact font used in the tutorial, The Batman Forever font from Dafont. This works for Rick, but does not work for me. I have now tried to Generate Fontatlas with 5 fonts, none of them work.
The option you have selected for the Character Set option in the Font Asset Creator dialog requires additional input which does not appear to be set and this is the likely cause for the issue.
Either change it to ASCII as suggested by @111100 or one of the other options as mentioned in the screen shot below as per your requirement. The last 2 options in the screen shot relate to the option you have currently selected and wont be applicable if you select ASCII etc.
I noticed that nothing phone comes with boring roboto font and there is no way to change font without root . Nothing OS developers can you please add apply custom font feature in Android 14 . Other brands like Samsung , Mi , OnePlus everyone support fonts.
Pixel phones use Google Sans UI in headers but still show Roboto font in other texts which breaks the user-experience . Similarly, Nothing Phones have Dotted header text and Roboto text in other places.
Adding the above CSS (without the HTML tags) to userstyle.css changes Markdown preview and Rich Text editor fonts to Courier New. If you don't have Courier New installed, it applies the default monospace font on your system.
to a note and it changes the Markdown side, does nothing to the Editor.
I opened userstyle.css and userchrome.css and put the above in. Also tested with and without style tags. I set "Editor font family" to "Courier New" and go to the Editor and it looks same as it ever was, aka the proportional font.
Did you quit Joplin? As in Ctrl-Q? The CSS files only get processed when Joplin first starts fresh. Simply clicking the close button doesn't really close it, you have to quit from the "File" menu (top left) or shortcut Ctrl-Q.
Changing the Markdown Editor font is, as you have seen, done in the settings. The only thing I have found is that because these fields are not drop-down selectors you have to type the name of the installed font exactly as it is shown in your OS font manager. I use "Roboto Mono" and these settings change the text of the Markdown Editor editing pane to the Roboto Mono monospace font.
Ok So, I open Tools - Options - LibreOffice Writer - Basic Fonts (Western), change the font and font size, click OK, close the current document, make a new open document text file(.odt) and then open the new file only to find it switched back to Liberation Serif, font size 12.
Turns out to get those settings to apply I need to go in the content browser, right click on the font asset and select reimport. Kinda confusing that there is nothing for that in the actual font editor.
I am happy that you have found a solution, I will be converting your last comment to an answer. If this issue returns and/or you require further assistance please feel free to update this thread with additional information. Thank you for your time and information.
Further, this seems to happen with many, many font distributions. I can use LuaLaTeX and an ODF or TT font; this seems to work, but I don't like the mixture of regular math and the ODF/TT. I can't even use Euler for math!
I am running a Windows 8 machine with TeXnicCenter. This originally started in LyX, where I tried changing the fonts through the menu, and I received very similar error messages. When I do an internet search, there seems to be a lot of Windows 8 machines that have the same problem. Or is it something that I am doing incorrectly?
To use a particular font with pdfLaTeX or LaTeX (as opposed to LuaLaTeX or XeLaTeX), you need to know either the name of a package which activates the font or the name of the font family as it is defined for LaTeX. This is not necessarily the name of the font. So although there is a package times, for example, there is no package, garamond.
The easiest way to find fonts you can use with (pdf)LaTeX is to use the LaTeX Font Catalogue. If you want a serif font, say, click on the relevant link to get a list of possibilities. Then click on a particular font to get details of availability and usage. Some fonts may not be readily available to you but many will. For example, clicking through, I find EBGaramond12, URW Garamond, Garamond Expert with mathdesign and Garamond Expert with newtxmath. Each page lists the lines you need to include in your preamble in order to use the font. It also tells you whether the package is part of TeX Live though I think that MiKTeX should install most things on-the-fly as necessary if you do not already have them.
The way to use system fonts is using font() with 4 arguments. The first three describe the font as family, style and size. If the 4th is omitted we make some OS dependent sensible mapping for the predefined font families. If the 4th is present, this is used to create the font and the other three are simply recorded with the font.
So, if there is a : in the name, use XftFontOpenName(), else use XftFontOpenXlfd(). Now, it is extremely hard to find good documentation for these functions I could find some hints on -user.html, section Font names.
I finally got what I wanted in the end thanks to your help. I read that page, I used the FC_DEBUG variable for a while. The window sample was the clincher and then a little hacky and I now have, actually, IBM 3270 in the editor which is a really nice font for extended hours at the wheel.
Sorry for the delay. It took my a while to find your problem, but I found it. You have to drag your characters to the last of the four fields in fontself maker, because FS does not recognise letters a, b, c when they have holes in them.
I have an overly complex script that compares the document's fonts missing fonts to the system fonts and makes a best guess. It was written to handle conversion of Multi-ad Creator documents to InDesign. It has worked 100% of the time so far. It needs a LOT of cleaning up and tweaking to make effecient, but that is not the point of my question. Everyday I am sent an InDesign file I have to work with and everyday it will has a missing font. Arial (OTF).
set properties of find change text options to case sensitive:false, whole word:false, include footnotes:false, include hidden layers:false, include locked layers for find:true, include locked stories for find:true, include master pages:true
On a side note: It seems almost everytime I google for something to do with scripting this stuff your name pops up in the thread. Directly (here) and indirectly (old mail lists) you have been a great help to me in most of my endeavours at automating. I just wanted to say thanks.
That would defeat the purpose of automating the entire process. I don't want to have to do anything but be George Jetson and click 1 button to do the whole proccess. If I have the time to write the scripts then I'm going to automate the majority of my job. Luckily for me no one else understands how to write any of this stuff. They don't trust the scripts either, so I'm in no danger of automating myself out of a job.
Well I've been to busy to revisit this but I will in the next day or two. Sadly one of my co-workers had to leave work permanently due to cancer treatment not being effective. It has been somewhat emotional and overwhelmingly busy as the rest of us picked up the added work load.
My experience has been quiet like absqua described: The font name shows up in the Find/Change UI, but for whatever reason it does not work. When I manually changed it the Font Family field is empty. Selecting the font has the result that the Find/Change UI appears to be exactly as it was before, except now the characters with the applied font are actually found.
I've run into even more fonts that it is an issue with. My basic thoughts on this are as follows: When bringing a document from Multi-ad Creator to InDesign the fonts are named in a way that InDesign does not recognize them. The thing is those fonts are really fonts that are on my system. It is simply a matter of rearranging the name of the applied font to match what InDesign would recognize. The thing is InDesign will allow me to use Find/Change to modify the fonts in the document.
It seems a missing font is not a Font -- the internal type for InDesign, with a name, an id, a version number etc. etc. Since it's not a Font, none of the regular ways of using it work: not by object id, not by name, and not by direct object reference. The "(OTF)" and "(TT)" suffixes are not part of the font name, as you can see when doing this
I tried to delete and start new text. This time i didnt copy text but recreated whole text again. Everything seems to be ok, no changing font size. So my conclusion is the problem is caused by copying text form MS Word to pop-up.
So my question: Is there any way how to avoid this problem but still using word as back up of text for pop-up? Because most of the popups have same text with only few changes, so i ma kinda lazy to write every pop-up to note pad, or make separete notepads for every pop-up/expression and word let me organized pop-ups/expressions in chapters so its easy to orient in 10+ pages documents.
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