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karels18874977
Participant
June 13, 2022
Answered

Corrupt font? does not read Romanian "ț" properly

  • June 13, 2022
  • 1 reply
  • 1213 views

Hi all - I use a company brand font that has the Romanian "ț" letter in glyphs, but does not recognize it properly when applied at existing text. InDesign does not recognize "ț" at all, MS Word shows it in bold. At least some success.

Is the fault with InDesign or the font?

Thanks,

Karel 

This topic has been closed for replies.
Correct answer karels18874977

I suppose if you create a character style with a font with that letter you can use the GREP as part of the paragraph style. That’s what I do in such cases.


That´s a good idea. Thanks, Willi!

1 reply

Willi Adelberger
Community Expert
Community Expert
June 13, 2022

Are you sure that this font contains this “ț”?

That this letter is shown in Word does not mean that it is in this font as Word can replace missing glyphs from their internal font database, which is in their program folders. 

What font type is this? What font?

karels18874977
Participant
June 13, 2022

Hi Willi - I am using Honeywell Sans Book (OTF font). When I change a paragraph style from an old Helvetiva to Honeywell Sans Book, it creates errors as shown in pic_1. I have to use Find/Replace command to fix the wrong characters. Pic_2 shows the glyph menu, offering the correct character.

Community Expert
June 13, 2022

Hi Karel,

could be that Honeywell Sans Book has the glyph on a different Unicode code point than the old Helvetica.

To check this, select one of the missing glyphs in your text and read out its Unicode value with InDesign's Information panel. A sample from my German InDesign:

 

I'm not sure about the Unicode value of the character you want to use for substitution.

If I copy/paste the character from your post it is  Latin Small Letter T with Comma Below.

Then its Unicode value is 021B. I looked this up on the web and also in my Glyphs panel.

 

If the Unicode values differ you can do a GREP Find/Change action where you are looking for a code point like:

\x{xyzz}

replace it with the new value for Latin Small Letter T with Comma Below:

\x{021B}

 

NOTE: value xyzz is not an actual Unicode value. My screenshot above is showing a missing glyph with Unicode value 1E6D which stands for Latin Small Letter T with Dot Below.

As I said above, you have to check that with the Information panel when the missing glyph is selected in your text.

 

Regards,
Uwe Laubender
( Adobe Community Professional )