B
BobMed
I was sent a document containing only one table with four rows and
three columns. The font for all text was Arial Unicode. the table
looked fine on the screen, but on printing, the gridlines were missing
and each letter was rotated counterclockwise 90 degrees with letters
overlapping. The page was set up to be landscape, but no matter how I
printed it, the result was the same.
When I changed the font to Arial, it printed correctly.
I know Arial Unicode is not recommended for English-only text, but why
would this happen? How did the original author get this formatting
(she didn't select it deliberately; I think it came from cut and paste
or from document conversion)? How can I prevent this in the future
(prevent the text from being formatted in a Unicode font)?
Thanks,
Bob
three columns. The font for all text was Arial Unicode. the table
looked fine on the screen, but on printing, the gridlines were missing
and each letter was rotated counterclockwise 90 degrees with letters
overlapping. The page was set up to be landscape, but no matter how I
printed it, the result was the same.
When I changed the font to Arial, it printed correctly.
I know Arial Unicode is not recommended for English-only text, but why
would this happen? How did the original author get this formatting
(she didn't select it deliberately; I think it came from cut and paste
or from document conversion)? How can I prevent this in the future
(prevent the text from being formatted in a Unicode font)?
Thanks,
Bob