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Hallo ich möchte Adobe Fonts herunterladen. Das Programm welches ich nutzen möchte verlangt eines der folgenden Dateiendungen:
- Open Type Font (.otf)
- True Type Font (.tff)
- Web Open Font Format (.woof)
Auf Adobe Fonts finde ich keine Downloadmöglichkeiten.
Kannst Du mir bitte helfen und sagen wie das geht?
Vielen Dank!
MaX
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Hi Max,
Thank you for reaching out. Adobe Fonts are activated on your computer via a Creative Cloud desktop app and can be used in Adobe apps. Would you mind telling me in which application you want to use the Adobe Fonts?
Thanks,
Harshika
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I'm interested in that matter as well ... I have a CC subscription and would like to use the Adobe Garamond Pro font for my thesis. I'm using TeXstudio, a LaTeX editor, in which fonts can only be implemented by code, which means that the font has to be an actual .otf file on my computer. Is there any way to make that work? I've already been considering writing my thesis in InDesign, but there's no comfortable way to manage references in that program since it's not really designed for that purpose.
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If TeXStudio accesses font using standard operating system APIs, it should be able to see and utilize whatever fonts you activate via Adobe Fonts.
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Unfortunately, the TeX distribution (TeXstudio is only the editor, compiling works through a distribution like MikTeX for example, I've put that wrong, sorry) doesn't seem to have access to Adobe fonts. I can use whatever fonts show up in the Windows Fonts folder, but my activated Adobe fonts don't show up there and therefore can't be implemented apparently. LaTeX is a very common markup language used for scientific papers, I think many people would appreciate an Adobe solution for that field of work. 🙂
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With Adobe Fonts, the only font formats available on your computer are OpenType fonts.
You cannot select a format such as TrueType or woff.
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Actually, not quite true!
Although it is true that for desktop use, you are not offered a choice of formats, not all of the desktop fonts are OpenType CFF (i.e., Type 1 Bezier outline-flavoured OpenType). Some, especially those from the early Typekit days (prior to acquisition by Adobe) and fonts acquired from Google Fonts are in fact OpenType TTF (i.e. TrueType quadratic curve-flavoured OpenType) fonts.