From: faceman28208 on 9 Feb 2010 16:01 On Feb 9, 5:43 am, "Terry Farrell" <terryfarr...(a)msn.com> wrote: > If one of the styles is set as Century Schoolbook and you change the fonts > by SelectAll and do a global font change, this is not changing the style. > You have applied Direct Formatting, so the underlying style is still set at > CSB. As an illustration, if you SelectAll and execute Ctrl+Q and > Ctrl+spacebar, it will remove ALL direct formatting and display all the > underlying styles. All the fonts are set using styles.
From: faceman28208 on 9 Feb 2010 16:08 On Feb 9, 5:43 am, "Terry Farrell" <terryfarr...(a)msn.com> wrote: > If one of the styles is set as Century Schoolbook and you change the fonts > by SelectAll and do a global font change, this is not changing the style. > You have applied Direct Formatting, so the underlying style is still set at > CSB. As an illustration, if you SelectAll and execute Ctrl+Q and > Ctrl+spacebar, it will remove ALL direct formatting and display all the > underlying styles. In fact, I went back, printed the Style definitions. No Century Schoolbook. I went through each style and not one of them uses century schoolbook And it's not been applied to any of the text.
From: Yves Dhondt on 9 Feb 2010 18:21 Did you check all the styles or only the ones you used in your document? Like I stated in an earlier reply, an unused but defined style could be causing the font to be included. Try the following. Save your document as a Word 2007 document, i.e. with the docx extension. Now, close Word, go to the file and change the extension to zip. Open the archive and browse to the 'word' directory inside. Check the file 'fontTable.xml' to see if the Century Schoolbook font is listed there. If not, check 'styles.xml' file. If the font is listed in any of those, the pdf creation will include it. Yves <faceman28208(a)yahoo.com> wrote in message news:9a0642c1-eec3-4661-b834-abc4ed0ec1a4(a)v36g2000vbs.googlegroups.com... On Feb 9, 5:43 am, "Terry Farrell" <terryfarr...(a)msn.com> wrote: > If one of the styles is set as Century Schoolbook and you change the fonts > by SelectAll and do a global font change, this is not changing the style. > You have applied Direct Formatting, so the underlying style is still set > at > CSB. As an illustration, if you SelectAll and execute Ctrl+Q and > Ctrl+spacebar, it will remove ALL direct formatting and display all the > underlying styles. In fact, I went back, printed the Style definitions. No Century Schoolbook. I went through each style and not one of them uses century schoolbook And it's not been applied to any of the text.
From: faceman28208 on 10 Feb 2010 22:56 On Feb 9, 6:21 pm, "Yves Dhondt" <yves.dho...(a)gmail.com> wrote: > Did you check all the styles or only the ones you used in your document? > Like I stated in an earlier reply, an unused but defined style could be > causing the font to be included. > > Try the following. Save your document as a Word 2007 document, i.e. with the > docx extension. Now, close Word, go to the file and change the extension to > zip. Open the archive and browse to the 'word' directory inside. Check the > file 'fontTable.xml' to see if the Century Schoolbook font is listed there. > If not, check 'styles.xml' file. If the font is listed in any of those, the > pdf creation will include it. Interesting. I can see where it is coming from. It looks like word creates an internal character style for linked styles. I can see the font in one of these. In this particular case it is the 'QuoteChar" style, part of the built in Quote style. I have disabled linked styles in document.
From: faceman28208 on 10 Feb 2010 23:02 On Feb 9, 6:21 pm, "Yves Dhondt" <yves.dho...(a)gmail.com> wrote: > Did you check all the styles or only the ones you used in your document? > Like I stated in an earlier reply, an unused but defined style could be > causing the font to be included. > > Try the following. Save your document as a Word 2007 document, i.e. with the > docx extension. Now, close Word, go to the file and change the extension to > zip. Open the archive and browse to the 'word' directory inside. Check the > file 'fontTable.xml' to see if the Century Schoolbook font is listed there. > If not, check 'styles.xml' file. If the font is listed in any of those, the > pdf creation will include it. Another interesting thing...The actual font is Century Schoolbook Bold Italic. In this document the Quote style is set to use Times New Roman (Roman). Makes me wonder if Word loses track of the character part of a linked style.
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