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Specify a typeface size, Previewing fonts, Opentype fonts – Adobe InDesign CS4 User Manual

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USING INDESIGN CS4

Typography

2 Do any of the following:

In the Character panel or Control panel, select a font in the Font Family menu or a style in the Type Style menu.
(In Mac

OS, you can select type styles in the Font Family submenus.)

In the Character panel or Control panel, click in front of the font family name or type style name (or double-click
its first word) and type in the first few characters of the name you want. As you type, InDesign displays font family
or type style names that match the characters you’ve typed.

Choose a font in the Type > Font menu. Note that you choose both a font family and a type style when you use this menu.

Specify a typeface size

By default, typeface size is measured in points (a point equals 1/72 of an inch). You can specify any typeface size from
0.1 to 1296 points, in 0.001-point increments.

1 Select the characters or type objects you want to change. If you don’t select any text, the typeface size applies to new

text you create.

2 Do one of the following:

In the Character panel or Control bar set the Font Size option.

Choose a size from the Type > Size menu. Choosing Other lets you type a new size in the Character panel.

You can change the unit of measurement for type in the Preferences dialog box.

Previewing fonts

You can view samples of a font in the font family and font style menus in the Character panel and other areas in the
application from where you can choose fonts. The following icons are used to indicate different kinds of fonts:

OpenType

Type 1

TrueType

Multiple Master

Composite

You can turn off the preview feature or change the point size of the font names or font samples in Type preferences.

OpenType fonts

OpenType fonts use a single font file for both Windows® and Macintosh® computers, so you can move files from one
platform to another without worrying about font substitution and other problems that cause text to reflow. They may
include a number of features, such as swashes and discretionary ligatures, that aren’t available in current PostScript
and TrueType fonts.

OpenType fonts display the

icon.

When working with an OpenType font, you can automatically substitute alternate glyphs, such as ligatures, small
capitals, fractions, and old style proportional figures, in your text.

Updated 18 June 2009