Good Morning,
I have a project where there is a mix of Chinese and english characters.
On the print option (to PDF) the Chinese characters come out fine but the english over lap or incorrectly spaced.
Can anyone help?
Chinese / English mixed content character spacing
Moderators: Alexander Halser, Tim Green
- Danny Fitton
- Posts: 5
- Joined: Thu Oct 02, 2014 11:55 am
- Location: Rochdale, England
- Contact:
Chinese / English mixed content character spacing
Danny Fitton
Applications Engineer
Holroyd Precision Ltd
Harbour Lane North,
Milnrow, Rochdale,
Lancashire OL16 3LQ, UK
www.holroyd.com
Applications Engineer
Holroyd Precision Ltd
Harbour Lane North,
Milnrow, Rochdale,
Lancashire OL16 3LQ, UK
www.holroyd.com
- Tim Green
- Site Admin
- Posts: 23182
- Joined: Mon Jun 24, 2002 9:11 am
- Location: Bruehl, Germany
- Contact:
Re: Chinese / English mixed content character spacing
Hi Danny,
This will only work correctly if you either: 1) Use full Unicode fonts that contain all the characters for both Chinese and Latin characters in the same font, or 2) Use separate text styles with Latin and Chinese fonts for the English and Chinese texts.
In addition to this you also need to embed the fonts in the PDF to make absolutely sure that they will be available on the machines where the PDF is going to be viewed. Otherwise, if the font isn't available Windows will make automatic substitutions and you will again get kerning problems because the kerning tables of the substitute font often won't match the original with which the PDF was generated. You set up font embedding in the Project Explorer on the left, in Configuration > Publishing Options > PDF > Font Embedding.
Finally, setting the font embedding option to Type 3 font embedding will often improve things, at the expense of a very slight reduction in text sharpness.
This will only work correctly if you either: 1) Use full Unicode fonts that contain all the characters for both Chinese and Latin characters in the same font, or 2) Use separate text styles with Latin and Chinese fonts for the English and Chinese texts.
In addition to this you also need to embed the fonts in the PDF to make absolutely sure that they will be available on the machines where the PDF is going to be viewed. Otherwise, if the font isn't available Windows will make automatic substitutions and you will again get kerning problems because the kerning tables of the substitute font often won't match the original with which the PDF was generated. You set up font embedding in the Project Explorer on the left, in Configuration > Publishing Options > PDF > Font Embedding.
Finally, setting the font embedding option to Type 3 font embedding will often improve things, at the expense of a very slight reduction in text sharpness.
Regards,
Tim (EC Software Documentation & User Support)
Private support:
Please do not email or PM me with private support requests -- post to the forum directly.
Tim (EC Software Documentation & User Support)
Private support:
Please do not email or PM me with private support requests -- post to the forum directly.