![]() ![]() Tahoma Bold (with associated data tahomabd.ttf). Locate the font name from the error message.Locate and then click the following registry subkey: HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\Fonts.Type regedit into the Run box and click OK to confirm.To resolve this problem, you must reorder two string values that are associated with the font in the HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\Fonts registry subkey. For more information about how to back up and restore the registry, click the following article number to view the article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base: # 322756 (How to back up and restore the registry in Windows). Then, you can restore the registry if a problem occurs. For added protection, back up the registry before you modify it. Therefore, make sure that you follow these steps carefully. However, serious problems might occur if you modify the registry incorrectly. Important: This section contains steps that tell you how to modify the registry. You can try the below steps to remedy the situation. However, this will not solve the issue permanently. Not otherwise display.A simple workaround has been described in this article:Įrror when trying to open file for translation in SDL Trados Studio: "Unknown exception when generating layout for segment x" “Display Hidden”, which are intended to reveal characters that would ![]() Rendering systems may support special display modes such as Q: When would a font ever contain glyphs for invisible characters? Where a font is being designed for a rendering system that does not handle invisible characters (such as variation selectors), then the best glyph for them - in theĪbsence of other support - is a zero-width invisible glyph. Q: How does the recommendation not to give any visible display for a subset of default ignorable code points affect font design?įonts are really best viewed in the context of a whole rendering system, since other parts of that system may handle various aspects of rendering. Section 5.3, Unknown and Missing Characters, and see the Text under “Interpretable but Unrenderable Characters” in Type of character which is missing a glyph. Missing glyphs for characters to give the user some indication of the Note that recommended practice is to provide different Q: Which characters should be displayed with aĪll characters other than whitespace and default-ignorable See UTS #51 Unicode Emoji for more details about emoji display. If C is unsupported see Q: How should characters be displayed if the rendering system doesn’t fully support them?Ī VS sequence may also be part of a grapheme cluster, such as an emoji sequence. Otherwise, display with the normal glyph for C (with no visible rendering for the VS).If C FE0E is listed in emoji-variant-sequences.txt, display C with a regular, non-emoji glyph, if supported.If C FE0F is listed in emoji-variant-sequences.txt, display C as emoji, if supported.The expected rendering behavior for the sequence of character plus a variation selector (C VS) isĪnd is supported by the rendering system, then display with the specified glyph. Q: What is the intended display for variation selector sequences (including unsupported ones)? Note that there are no White_Space chracters that have the Default_Ignorable_Code_Point property. Jamo filler characters (e.g., U 115F HANGUL CHOSEONG FILLER)įor the full list, see the Default_ignorable_Code_Point Invisible math operators (e.g., U 2061 FUNCTION APPLICATION) The zero width space (U 200B ZERO WIDTH SPACE) Word joiners (U 2060 WORD JOINER, also U FEFF ZWNBSP) These include:Ĭursive joiners (U 200C ZWNJ, U 200D ZWJ)īidirectional format controls (e.g. “ zero width”), if notĮxplicitly supported in rendering. For the full list, see the White_SpaceĪll default-ignorable characters should be rendered asĬompletely invisible (and non advancing, i.e. Includes SPACE, of course, but also such characters as the tab control character, NO-BREAK SPACE, LINE SEPARATOR, and so on. This is the easy one: all the characters that have the White_Space property, also generically known as Q: Which characters should be displayed as The other common implementation displays the characters hex code instead of a non-specific glyph. One is the Last Resort Font, for which the generic glyphs are specific to the script, making it easier to identify which font resources might need to be installed to support the characters. Two implementations of generic glyphs are worth calling out. Some should display as a visible (but blank) space and some should be displayed with one or more generic glyphs, often referred to as “ missing glyphs” or a Some should not display at all (zero-width invisible characters) There are three main options, depending on the type of character involved. The rendering system doesn’t fully support them? Frequently Asked Questions Display of Unsupported Characters ![]()
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