From: faceman28208 on 8 Feb 2010 14:29 I am creating a PDF file and several unused fonts appear embedded in the PDF. I have tried several PDF creators and get the sames fonts (e.g. why embed Century Schoolbook?). So they must be getting the information from Word. However, I have searched the document (all in Times New Roman) using the font search and there is no century schoolbook anywhere.
From: Terry Farrell on 8 Feb 2010 16:09 It must be in the document. Have you checked all the styles are correct including any blank paragraphs you may have entered to create spacing? Are you sure that none of the styles are based on a style using a different font? Why are you embedding fonts into the PDF? How are you able to confirm that Century Schoolbook is embedded? -- Terry Farrell - MSWord MVP <faceman28208(a)yahoo.com> wrote in message news:89b6929f-3fcd-422b-8596-57a11b27f8dc(a)q4g2000yqm.googlegroups.com... > I am creating a PDF file and several unused fonts appear embedded in > the PDF. I have tried several PDF creators and get the sames fonts > (e.g. why embed Century Schoolbook?). So they must be getting the > information from Word. > However, I have searched the document (all in Times New Roman) using > the font search and there is no century schoolbook anywhere.
From: Yves Dhondt on 8 Feb 2010 17:37 I agree that it must be in the document (the file), but it doesn't necessarely have to be in the text itself. One could define a style using the font and never apply the style. When converting to pdf, it is likely that the unused style, and thereby (part of) the font, will be included in the pdf. In Acrobat, you can just do File -> Properties (CTRL+D) and go to the 'Fonts' tab. It shows which fonts are embedded (mostly subsets). Yves "Terry Farrell" <terryfarrell(a)msn.com> wrote in message news:OHmZOMQqKHA.5116(a)TK2MSFTNGP04.phx.gbl... > It must be in the document. Have you checked all the styles are correct > including any blank paragraphs you may have entered to create spacing? Are > you sure that none of the styles are based on a style using a different > font? > > Why are you embedding fonts into the PDF? How are you able to confirm that > Century Schoolbook is embedded? > > -- > Terry Farrell - MSWord MVP > > <faceman28208(a)yahoo.com> wrote in message > news:89b6929f-3fcd-422b-8596-57a11b27f8dc(a)q4g2000yqm.googlegroups.com... >> I am creating a PDF file and several unused fonts appear embedded in >> the PDF. I have tried several PDF creators and get the sames fonts >> (e.g. why embed Century Schoolbook?). So they must be getting the >> information from Word. >> However, I have searched the document (all in Times New Roman) using >> the font search and there is no century schoolbook anywhere. >
From: faceman28208 on 8 Feb 2010 21:05 On Feb 8, 4:09 pm, "Terry Farrell" <terryfarr...(a)msn.com> wrote: > It must be in the document. Have you checked all the styles are correct > including any blank paragraphs you may have entered to create spacing? Are > you sure that none of the styles are based on a style using a different > font? I have no footnotes. I have selected the entire document and the font text box shows times new roman, rather than a blank as when multiple fonts are selectged. > Why are you embedding fonts into the PDF? How are you able to confirm that > Century Schoolbook is embedded? PDF creators do it automatically. If you inspect the PDF's properties you can see the fonts and that Century Schoolbook is there.
From: Terry Farrell on 9 Feb 2010 05:43 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. Terry <faceman28208(a)yahoo.com> wrote in message news:da8cf425-0a43-4436-87bc-eec81d683f22(a)a1g2000vbl.googlegroups.com... > On Feb 8, 4:09 pm, "Terry Farrell" <terryfarr...(a)msn.com> wrote: >> It must be in the document. Have you checked all the styles are correct >> including any blank paragraphs you may have entered to create spacing? >> Are >> you sure that none of the styles are based on a style using a different >> font? > > I have no footnotes. I have selected the entire document and the font > text box shows times new roman, rather than a blank as when multiple > fonts are selectged. > >> Why are you embedding fonts into the PDF? How are you able to confirm >> that >> Century Schoolbook is embedded? > > PDF creators do it automatically. If you inspect the PDF's properties > you can see the fonts and that Century Schoolbook is there.
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