Hello Rick,
A co-worker of mine once had the same problem:
On her system, there was a font installed from the network,
without copying it to the fonts folder.
And in the meantime, the font was removed ...
>> Is there someone I can go to check the path
>> of where Frame is looking for fonts.
Your
At 11:03 AM -0300 8/5/06, Bill Briggs wrote:
>At 10:16 PM -0600 8/4/06, Ed Rush wrote:
>>In "real" Mac OS 9 and earlier, you would increase the memory allotted to
>>FrameMaker (or any app) by typing a number in the app's Information window
>>(command-I). In Classic under OS 10.4, however, I'm see
At 10:16 PM -0600 8/4/06, Ed Rush wrote:
>In "real" Mac OS 9 and earlier, you would increase the memory allotted to
>FrameMaker (or any app) by typing a number in the app's Information window
>(command-I). In Classic under OS 10.4, however, I'm seeing this grayed out. It
>won't let me up the mem
Hi, Ed:
This approach works in 10.3.9, so it might be a Tiger change nobody's
yet encountered.
Have you tried starting up in OS 9.x, if Tiger permits it, setting the
memory, then quitting and restarting in Tiger?
Also, have you checked your permissions for the application? Your
current accoun
Murray Moore wrote:
> To make these entries easier for me to read and edit in the tiny
> index marker window
You might want to check into emDEX (an add-on utility) for indexing in
FrameMaker. It allows you to customize the size of the marker box itself
along with the font used in the marker box.
Murray Moore wrote:
> To make these entries easier for me to read and edit in the tiny
> index marker window
You might want to check into emDEX (an add-on utility) for indexing in
FrameMaker. It allows you to customize the size of the marker box itself
along with the font used in the marker box.
On Aug 4, 2006, at 9:16 PM, Ed Rush wrote:
In "real" Mac OS 9 and earlier, you would increase the memory
allotted to FrameMaker (or any app) by typing a number in the app's
Information window (command-I).
It still works the same way.
In Classic under OS 10.4, however, I'm seeing this gray
On Aug 4, 2006, at 9:16 PM, Ed Rush wrote:
> In "real" Mac OS 9 and earlier, you would increase the memory
> allotted to FrameMaker (or any app) by typing a number in the app's
> Information window (command-I).
It still works the same way.
> In Classic under OS 10.4, however, I'm seeing thi
Hi, Ed:
This approach works in 10.3.9, so it might be a Tiger change nobody's
yet encountered.
Have you tried starting up in OS 9.x, if Tiger permits it, setting the
memory, then quitting and restarting in Tiger?
Also, have you checked your permissions for the application? Your
current acc
At 11:03 AM -0300 8/5/06, Bill Briggs wrote:
>At 10:16 PM -0600 8/4/06, Ed Rush wrote:
>>In "real" Mac OS 9 and earlier, you would increase the memory allotted to
>>FrameMaker (or any app) by typing a number in the app's Information window
>>(command-I). In Classic under OS 10.4, however, I'm see
At 10:16 PM -0600 8/4/06, Ed Rush wrote:
>In "real" Mac OS 9 and earlier, you would increase the memory allotted to
>FrameMaker (or any app) by typing a number in the app's Information window
>(command-I). In Classic under OS 10.4, however, I'm seeing this grayed out. It
>won't let me up the mem
In "real" Mac OS 9 and earlier, you would increase the memory
allotted to FrameMaker (or any app) by typing a number in the app's
Information window (command-I). In Classic under OS 10.4, however,
I'm seeing this grayed out. It won't let me up the memory.
Does anyone here know of a way arou
Hello Rick,
A co-worker of mine once had the same problem:
On her system, there was a font installed from the network,
without copying it to the fonts folder.
And in the meantime, the font was removed ...
>> Is there someone I can go to check the path
>> of where Frame is looking for fonts.
Your
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