Microsoft KB Archive/211916

= WD2000: Some Fonts Available in Word 95 No Longer Available in Word 2000 =

Article ID: 211916

Article Last Modified on 9/7/2001

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APPLIES TO


 * Microsoft Word 2000 Standard Edition

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This article was previously published under Q211916



For a Microsoft Word 2002 version of this article, see 291354.



SUMMARY
The following TrueType fonts, available in earlier versions of Microsoft Word, are not available in Microsoft Word 97 and later.
 * Arial CE
 * Arial Cyr
 * Arial Greek
 * Bookshelf Symbol 1
 * Bookshelf Symbol 2
 * Courier New CE
 * Courier New Cyr
 * Courier Greek
 * MS LineDraw
 * Times New Roman CE
 * Times New Roman Cyr
 * Times New Roman Greek

The following vector fonts, available in earlier versions of Microsoft Word, are no longer available in Microsoft Word 97 and later.


 * Modern
 * Roman
 * Script

Screen fonts are also not available in Microsoft Word 2000. Screen fonts may include:
 * Fixedsys
 * MS Sans Serif
 * MS Serif
 * Small Fonts
 * System
 * Terminal



MS LineDraw
The MS LineDraw font is identified as a symbol font. Therefore, Word 2000 interprets text typed in the MS LineDraw font as a series of symbols, and many of the formatting and proofing features of Word ignore the text.

Courier New contains the exact same character set as MS LineDraw. Existing documents formatted with the MS LineDraw font are mapped to Courier New when opened in Word 2000.

To access the line drawing characters that were formerly available in MS LineDraw, click Symbol on the Insert menu, change the font to (normal text), and change the Subset to Box Drawing.

Bookshelf Symbol
Bookshelf Symbol 1 and Bookshelf Symbol 2 fonts are not proper symbol fonts. Because Word 2000 supports Unicode, these fonts are not usable in Word. In many cases, if a converted document contains these fonts, you see "empty" characters, represented by square boxes.

International Fonts
Word 2000 makes available most international fonts.

For additional information, click the article number below to view the article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:

212400 WD2000: General Information About International and Multilingual Features

Vector Fonts
Vector fonts use an older font technology, and the quality of the printed output is very poor. Because of the poor printed quality, these fonts were removed from the font list in Microsoft Word 97 and later.

Examples of this font are Roman, Modern, and Script. They are mostly used by Plotter printers under Microsoft Windows 3.x.

Screen Fonts
Microsoft Word is designed to produce WYSIWYG (What You See Is What You Get) output. In order to attain that goal, the text that is displayed on the screen must be able to be printed. If the text is formatted with a screen font, then a font substitution must occur when the document is printed, because screen fonts are for display only and cannot be printed.

A font substitution may produce non-WYSIWYG output. For this reason, screen fonts are not available in the font list.

You can still force Word to use a screen font to display the text by typing the name of the font, exactly as it is named in Windows, into the font list and pressing ENTER.

