Thanks for the clarification, Geert.

I’m afraid I am not familiar with CSS styling, so I will just use the 
workaround for now.

Cheers.

> On 19-Jan-2019, at 6:07 PM, Geert Janssens <geert.gnuc...@kobaltwit.be> wrote:
> 
> Op zaterdag 19 januari 2019 12:53:10 CET schreef Deva -:
>> Adrien,
>> 
>> Thanks for the pointer on how to figure the font associated with a symbol.
>> Yes, I now see the names of all fonts for the various rupee symbols
>> (including Helvetica).
> 
>> However, when I edit the default stylesheet to use any of the the available
>> rupee symbol fonts (I tried a couple of them - there were too many to try
>> all of them), the tax invoice report still doesn’t show the symbol.
> 
>> So for now, I am afraid I have to stick with the text version of the
>> symbol.
> 
> Allow me to point out that the tax invoice is not affected by changes in the 
> default style sheet at all as far as I know.
> 
> It uses css styling, not the stylesheet editor built-in into gnucash. So to 
> test changes of font you will have to add a font property to the css for that 
> report. The easiest way is as Adrien suggested in an earlier reply via the 
> report's option dialog. On the Notes tab you can add custom css snippets.
> 
> I don't know off-hand what an appropriate snippet would look like in this 
> particular case. Perhaps someone else could provide that.
> 
> Regards,
> 
> Geert
> 
> 

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