![]() ![]() Then again, if you are able to call them up in the Character Map, you must have a supporting font somewhere. ![]() It seems Microsoft, for its part, fails to see (huh huh) a problem. My Mac has one font that contains them it's aptly called "Apple Braille" and came on the system. Surprisingly, I don't see any modern Windows fonts, nor the otherwise trustworthy fallback Arial Unicode MS. Also, you only have to have one font - there is no use to press font makers into adding them to every font.Ĭheck this font list and see if it contains something you recognize: (not Last Resort or SIL Unicode BMP Fallback, though - these are generic 'placeholder fonts' only, and should not appear in such a list). Our Large Print transcription process has. It is not strange that none of the fonts you checked contains Braille, it's a very rare set. At Braille Works, we realize that creating Large Print documents is much more than simply increasing the font size. Minus the ones that Windows cannot show, that is (ligatures, digits types, small capitals and so on). All I ever get to see is the exact character set as in the font. It must have some setting that (just like Word does) automatically selects a different font if the current one doesn't contain something. (Even though the local Adobe Staff seems to know more.) I am a bit in the dark, though, how you managed to get to see them in Windows' Character Map. I am sure Myriad Pro does not contain Braille patterns. ![]()
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