Hi, Thiemo Seufer wrote: > Replacement fonts are a standard feature, and using is usually breaks > formatting of the document.
This may be a nitpick, but documents which *break*, instead of just looking somewhat sub-optimal, are mostly designed (I'm using that word loosely) by people who still think that a word processing program works like a typewriter. The same thing happens if people want to print the nicely letter-formatted text some US colleague mailed them on *gasp* A4 *shock* paper, and no font equivalency will help you with that one. -- Matthias Urlichs | {M:U} IT Design @ m-u-it.de | [EMAIL PROTECTED] -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]