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Participant
June 7, 2016
解決済み

Lower case letters s and t connect at top

  • June 7, 2016
  • 返信数 5.
  • 34592 ビュー

Hello,

When using the fonts Trebuchet MS and Arial (OT) specifically the lower case letters s and t connect at the top like a glyph in InDesign.

Has anyone else run into this and is there a way to stop it from happening?

Thanks,

-Tom Fullen

このトピックへの返信は締め切られました。
解決に役立った回答 Peter Spier

That's a ligature. You can turn off ligatures from the character panel (or as part of the style definition). In this case it would be under OpenType  Features > Discretionary Ligatures.

To the best of my knowledge, neither Arial nor Trebuchet MS have that ligature in the glyph set, however, so there is something else going on. Perhaps a font substitution applied though a character style, maybe as a GREP style.

返信数 5

Participant
December 24, 2019

I have Arial font and still can see the fusion of s and t. I saw discretionary ligatures was off in my setting. 

Any other clue for this to make it work?

Thanks!

Deepak

Participant
July 29, 2022

It seems "Adobe World-ready single/paragraph composer" has been applied to your paragraph. Please change the paragraph composer to "Adobe Paragraph composer" to fix this issue.

Rami_M.
Participant
January 9, 2017

In Adobe Indesign (select all the text/rectangle that using the same font) then go to Paragraph options and change "Adobe World-ready paragraph composer" change it to "Adobe Paragraph composer".

That's it

Rami M.

Participant
May 7, 2019

THANK YOU!!!

Dov Isaacs
Legend
June 7, 2016

Peter's response is correct. There are some discretionary ligatures such as ‘ct’, ‘ch’, and ‘st’ that connect as you describe.

But none of these glyphs are available in any of the versions of Arial or Trebuchet that are normally bundled with Microsoft operating systems or Office products.

However, these discretionary ligatures are available in Calibri, one of the newer Microsoft fonts.

If you are seeing these discretionary glyphs appearing, somehow you are invoking, possibly by a character style or a default style Calibri (also a sans serif font like Trebuchet and Arial) with discretionary ligatures enabled.

          - Dov

- Dov Isaacs, former Adobe Principal Scientist (April 30, 1990 - May 30, 2021)
Peter Spier
Community Expert
Peter SpierCommunity Expert解決!
Community Expert
June 7, 2016

That's a ligature. You can turn off ligatures from the character panel (or as part of the style definition). In this case it would be under OpenType  Features > Discretionary Ligatures.

To the best of my knowledge, neither Arial nor Trebuchet MS have that ligature in the glyph set, however, so there is something else going on. Perhaps a font substitution applied though a character style, maybe as a GREP style.

Frans v.d. Geest
Community Expert
Community Expert
June 7, 2016

That is called a ligature, turn off that option in OpenType functions if you need to in InDesign.