Every graphic designer, publisher, and frequent PowerPoint user has seen it. You open a file, and a dialog box pops up with a stark, somewhat clinical warning:
: If a project was not "packaged" (a process that collects all fonts into one folder) before being transferred, the recipient will inevitably see this warning. The Risks of Continuing
Advocates for font substitution will say: "It prevents crashing. It allows basic readability."
You can control which font AutoCAD defaults to when it encounters a missing file. Type FONTALT into the command line.
Every graphic designer, publisher, and frequent PowerPoint user has seen it. You open a file, and a dialog box pops up with a stark, somewhat clinical warning:
: If a project was not "packaged" (a process that collects all fonts into one folder) before being transferred, the recipient will inevitably see this warning. The Risks of Continuing Font Substitution Will Occur Con
Advocates for font substitution will say: "It prevents crashing. It allows basic readability." Every graphic designer
You can control which font AutoCAD defaults to when it encounters a missing file. Type FONTALT into the command line. Font Substitution Will Occur Con