Actually I think the O-symbol fonts are old Adobe
type manager fonts (Used to be a thing you installed in Win 3 to get decent
fonts).
Rob
Software engineer Wild Software Ltd Ph 03 338-1407
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Friday, November 29, 2002 9:28
AM
Subject: RE: [DUG]: Fonts ...
As far as I know the
non-proportional fonts are those that have no symbol next to them in the font
dialog. It's probably not that hard to
determine this programmatically, but at this time I haven't given any thought
to how you would do this. Maybe someone else could answer this for
you.
About the O-symbol, I really don't have a clue, but maybe these
are outline-capable fonts?
-Andreas
Simple question
A.
In the Font
dialog box (Win2K), next to each font name it displays either TT (True
Type), blank or (). What does () mean???
Simple question
B.
Which fonts can
you get to draw in fixed pitch (ie non-proportional)?? From my testing it
appears that some will not - what determines this?
Thanks.
Myles.
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