Office Chinese Font
This Chinese font Card contains fonts that emulate the fonts provided in Microsoft Windows. The Windows drivers provided on the CD that ships with the printer.
I've set up Microsoft Chinese Input on Windows 7. I've noticed that whenever I enter characters, they appear in a muddy looking font with random line thicknesses, making the characters pretty illegible. Selecting the characters and manually changing the font to 'SimHei' or 'SimSun' makes the characters readable.
The selected illegible characters just list my default font, 'Times New Roman,' so I'm not sure what system Chinese font I'm actually getting. I'd gladly delete it. I've found a way to change the default system font for Chinese characters in earlier versions of Windows (edit a registry key under 'GDI?' ), but I don't have this registry setting in Windows 7. Has anyone else successfully set up SimSun or another font as the default font whenever typing Chinese Characters on Windows 7? Anyone else having this same problem? Here's how I fixed this error in Writer: First I adjusted language settings in OpenOffice Writer: 1) Tools -> Options -> Language Settings -> Languages.
A) Check 'Enabled for Asian Languages,' B) Select 'Chinese (simplified) from the drop down. At this point, the problem was not quite fixed, I still saw a few character blobs. I went back to options and found one more important setting. 2) Tools -> Options -> OpenOffice.org Writer -> Basic Fonts (Asian) a) Set 'SimSun' as default font, B) Set 'SimHei' at 14pt as heading font. The previous default was 'Lucida Sans Unicode,' which might have some weird kerning or encoding problems in OOo. Characters often collided, becoming illegible. I'm not entirely sure why my defaults were not correctly set to SimSun and SimHei.
Perhaps this is because I installed OpenOffice before correcting my system wide language settings.
• Open any Office application. For example, Word for Mac. • Click Word, or the menu for the Office application you opened, and then select Preferences. • Under Authoring and Proofing Tools, click East Asian Languages. • Select Japanese, Simplified Chinese, or Traditional Chinese.
You'll be prompted to restart the Office application to apply the change. • Open the Office application that you want to use an East Asian language in, and open a worksheet, document, or presentation. All of the East Asian language fonts and tools are available for use in the application.
You turn on the East Asian language features in Office 2011 for Mac by using the Microsoft Language Register. Then, for each Office application that you want to type East Asian characters in, you can select a East Asian input type. • Close any open Office applications.
• In the Finder, open Microsoft Office 2011/Additional Tools/Microsoft Language Register, and then double-click Microsoft Language Register to open the application. • On the Select the language to enable for Microsoft Office pop-up menu, click Simplified Chinese or Traditional Chinese, and then click OK. • On the Apple menu, click System Preferences.