WD: Different Character Displayed when Size or Zoom Level Change
ID: Q122833
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The information in this article applies to:
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Microsoft Word for the Macintosh, versions 6.0, 6.0.1, 6.0.1a
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Microsoft Word 98 Macintosh Edition
SYMPTOMS
Some extended characters or symbols, such as the robot character from the
New York font, display as other characters or symbols in Word for the
Macintosh when you change the font size or zoom percentage.
For example, the robot character changes to an uppercase Y umlaut, a heart
symbol, or musical notes, depending on the font size or zoom percentage you
use in Word. Regardless of which character is displayed in your document,
Word always prints the character as an uppercase Y umlaut.
This does not happen in Word for Windows.
CAUSE
This happens only with bitmap fonts on a Macintosh, not with scalable
fonts. In a bitmap font, the Macintosh operating system sometimes maps
different symbols to different point sizes of a single extended character
(that is, an upper character you cannot type directly from the keyboard).
For example, in the New York bitmap font, the system maps a robot, heart,
and musical notes symbol to the 12, 14, and 18-point sizes of a single
character, respectively.
When a symbol from a bitmap font changes as a result of changing the zoom
setting, Word is using a different font size to display the symbol. For the
12-point New York robot symbol, if you change the zoom to 125, 150, or 200
percent, Word displays an uppercase Y umlaut, heart, and robot,
respectively. To display the character at the 125 percent zoom level, Word
uses the scalable version of the font, whereas to display the character at
the 150 or 200 percent zoom level, Word uses the 18 and 24-point bitmap
font.
NOTE: By default, Word uses a bitmap version of the font whenever possible;
otherwise, Word substitutes a scalable font (bitmap fonts are produced in
only 8, 10, 12, 14, and 24 point sizes). For some fonts, such as New York,
there is both a bitmap and a scalable font. However, Word always prints the
scalable version of the font because Word cannot download a bitmap font to
the printer. This is why the robot character always prints as an uppercase
Y umlaut regardless of the zoom or font size.
STATUS
Word is functioning correctly. This problem stems from the Apple Macintosh
font definitions for bitmap fonts.
The third-party products discussed here are manufactured by vendors
independent of Microsoft; we make no warranty, implied or otherwise,
regarding these products' performance or reliability.
Additional query words:
Keywords : kb3rdparty kbprint macword word6 kbFont
Version : MACINTOSH:6.0,6.0.1,6.0.1a,98
Platform : MACINTOSH
Issue type : kbprb