Printer-resident fonts are stored
in a printer’s memory or on a hard drive connected to the printer.
Type 1 and TrueType fonts can be stored either on the printer or
on your computer; bitmap fonts are stored only on your computer. InDesign
downloads fonts as needed, provided they are installed on your computer’s
hard disk.
Choose from the following options in the Graphics
area of the Print dialog box to control how fonts are downloaded
to the printer.
- None
-
Includes a reference to the font in the PostScript file,
which tells the RIP or a post-processor where the font should be
included. This option is appropriate if the fonts reside in the
printer. TrueType fonts are named according to the PostScript name
in the font; however, not all applications can interpret these names.
To ensure that TrueType fonts are interpreted correctly, use one
of the other font downloading options.
- Complete
-
Downloads all fonts required for the document at the beginning
of the print job. All glyphs and characters in the font are included
even if they’re not used in the document. InDesign automatically
subsets fonts that contain more than the maximum number of glyphs
(characters) specified in the Preferences dialog box.
- Subset
-
Downloads only the characters (glyphs) used in the document.
Glyphs are downloaded once per page. This option typically results
in faster and smaller PostScript files when used with single-page
documents, or short documents without much text.
- Download PPD Fonts
-
Downloads all fonts used in the document, even if those fonts
reside in the printer. Use this option to ensure that InDesign uses
the font outlines on your computer for printing common fonts, such
as Helvetica and Times. Using this option can resolve problems with
font versions, such as mismatched character sets between your computer
and printer or outline variances in trapping. Unless you commonly
use extended character sets, you don’t need to use this option for
desktop draft printing.