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Tips.Net > WordTips Home > Files > Embedding TrueType Fonts by Default

Embedding TrueType Fonts by Default

Summary: TrueType fonts can be embedded in a Word document so that it can be properly viewed on systems that don’t have the font installed. If you embed fonts often, you may want a way to do so by default, without the necessity of explicitly going through the proper steps for each document. This tip explores ways you can accomplish this desire. (This tip works with Microsoft Word 97, Word 2000, Word 2002, and Word 2003.)

Like many Word users, Don Orlando uses TrueType fonts extensively in his documents. When preparing documents to be used by others, he routinely sets the document to embed TrueType fonts. Since doing this for every document is a bit laborious, Don wondered if there was a way to set font embedding so that it was on, by default, for all documents.

Embedding TrueType fonts is done by choosing Tools | Options | Save, and then setting the embedding options on the dialog box. (Click here to see a related figure.) This setting is persistent for a single document, meaning that when you save a document, the settings related to font embedding are saved with it. Because of this, you can change the setting in a template, and it will affect all the documents that are created based upon that template. Just load the template (even Normal.dot), change the embedding options, and save the template.

Remember that this approach affects only new documents based on the template. They will all have the embedding turned on, but existing documents to which the template is attached will not be affected. Why? Because the document already has the font embedding settings turned off, and the document setting overrides the template setting.

There is one caveat to all this--remember that turning on font embedding can increase the size of your documents, sometimes dramatically. If you change a template so that it has embedding turned on by default, this means that all your documents created from that template will be larger than they would otherwise be--perhaps unnecessarily so. You'll need to take pains to turn off font embedding on those documents where it is not specifically needed, in order to minimize document size.

If the main problem is setting the embedding options the way you want, you could create a macro that sets them for you. This would not be a difficult macro, and it could be assigned to a shortcut key or to a toolbar button--one click, and the options are properly set for the document that is open. The following is an example of a macro that turns on font embedding:

Sub EmbedTrueType()
    With ActiveDocument
        .EmbedTrueTypeFonts = True
        .SaveSubsetFonts = False
        .DoNotEmbedSystemFonts = True
    End With
End Sub

This macro sets all three options related to font embedding. If you want the settings to be different, you can change the True/False settings for each option. (Of course, you'll need to make sure that the .EmbedTrueTypeFonts property is always set to True in order to actually embed the fonts.)

Tip #231 applies to Microsoft Word versions: 97 | 2000 | 2002 | 2003


Take Control! Experienced users know that styles can make the difference between a plain document and a masterful one. This is the real power behind Word, and the key to that power can be found in WordTips: Styles and Templates.

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