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I'm working on a book project for an author using PowerPoint to lay it out (don't ask, wasn't my choice!). I've spent an entire day trying to find out whether the fonts in the PPT document are OTF, but either I'm completely stupid or the information isn't available. Adobe Tech Support says Adobe fonts aren't usable in Microsoft documents, but I find that hard to believe.
Can I create a PDF in 2023 (after the end of support for TTF) from such a document? Please don't ridicule me for this question, I'm at my wit's end 😮
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So sorry that you received such inaccurate information. I'll take a stab to clear up the issues.
whether the fonts in the PPT document are OTF, but either I'm completely stupid or the information isn't available. Adobe Tech Support says Adobe fonts aren't usable in Microsoft documents, but I find that hard to believe.
By @Susan Culligan
First, the issues surrounding "rent a fonts" from Adobe, Linotype, and other font foundries is a ripping hot mess. The system is flaky, at best.
Can I create a PDF in 2023 (after the end of support for TTF) from such a document? Please don't ridicule me for this question, I'm at my wit's end 😮
TTF fonts are still supported pretty much everywhere. It's PostScript fonts that are no longer supported in Adobe Creative Suite programs. Remember, the entire computer industry adopted Unicode/OpenType fonts in January 2000...23 years ago. We've all had enough time to read the memo and prepare for this day!
The TTF file extension is used on both OLD TrueType fonts and Unicode/OpenType TrueType fonts, so don't look only at the file extension. Check the font's properties as described above.
We advise our clients and students to avoid using OLD TrueType and PostScript fonts, and use Unicode/OpenType fonts exclusively in your projects. Your files will be more compliant when it's viewed on all kinds of devices and apps and will less likely have missing glyphs or characters.
We also recommend using SIL or open license fonts instead of Adobe's crazy font system. There are a lot of problems with Adobe's fonts licensing and availability. Just search this forum to get a sample of the problems! An excellent option is GoogleFonts, a joint development project of industry bigwigs and professional font designers. Visit https://fonts.google.com
Hope this helps!
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Wow! Thanks Bevi. I appreciate your thoughtful and in-depth response. This helps a lot.
Susan
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"I've spent an entire day trying to find out whether the fonts in the PPT document are OTF"
Convert the PPT to PDF, open it with Acrobat Pro and go to : Document Properties : Fonts
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@JR Boulay The test PDF used Unicode/OpenType fonts (TrueType flavored and PostScript/Type 1 flavored), but the fonts dialogue box in Acrobat doesn't accurately show the fonts. This is a shortcoming of Acrobat.
So that dialogue does not show the actual font technology, such as Unicode/OpenType. It's very misleading and I wish Adobe would upgrade it to accurately reflect the fonts.
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"The test PDF used Unicode/OpenType fonts (TrueType flavored and PostScript/Type 1 flavored), but the fonts dialogue box in Acrobat doesn't accurately show the fonts. This is a shortcoming of Acrobat."
No, Acrobat is correct, this is not a bug or a shortcoming. It is normal for fonts to be converted as part of the PDF making. So, what began as an OpenType may show up a PDF as Type 1, TrueType or a CID font. Very rarely it will show up as OpenType, but they were not allowed until PDF 1.6 (I seem to remember) so they are generally converted. So, when Acrobat sees the file, it reports accurately the font types as converted. There is no way to know what the fonts were originally, because there is nowhere in PDF to keep this info.
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Terrific! I'll do that right away. Thanks so much!
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You write "after the end of support for TTF" but this is completely wrong, of course there is a lot of misleading stuff on the internet. What you need to know is that it is Type 1 fonts that are going away, NOT TTF (TrueType) fonts. On Windows, these are PFB/PFM files.
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Oy vey!! No wonder people are confused! I so appreciate your help on this.