![]() It's also possible the original text has not been typed using a Unicode font. The older Windows system fonts Times New Roman, Arial, Georgia, Verdana, and the newer ones Calibri, Cambria, and Candara, and lots of the fonts that came with your InDesign installation support Cyrillic (at least Minion Pro and Myriad Pro do). (And OSX no doubt has a similar feature.) Now the character map will only show these characters for each font, so simply scroll through your font list to see which one have them. A small window pops up, enumerating all possible Unicode groups. Select 'Advanced view', Character set: Unicode, Group by: Unicode Subrange. If you are working on Windows, check the Character Map for fonts that support Cyrillic. ![]() Thus, changing the font does not change the text. Modern fonts are Unicode enabled, which simply means that in every font Cyrillic characters are found in the same place. So, to type a 'de' д, you would insert the character code for an 'ê'. ![]() An old hack to insert Cyrillic characters into a regular font was to replace "unused" characters with Cyrillic ones. I downloaded ERUniverse cyrillic font, and when I paste the Russian headline in a text box and go to select ERUniverse cyrillic, there's no Russian!
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |