![]() We can't live without the Noto series of fonts from Google Fonts: . My studio works on tons of STEM-govt materials that require a lot of math symbols. Illustrated the process from my German InDesign in three steps: But you can help yourself if you type all math symbols from Arial Unicode using the Glyphs panel in InDesign and copy the result to the Google Font's Custom Preview Text field like that ( don't know if that link will work ) : For Greek you could do a filtered list for example: You have to invest some time to inspect downloaded fonts because Google does not provide an overview of the full range of glyphs for a particular font, I think. You get the font files from that repository and you'll get no surprise if font foundries that now work with Adobe quit their contracts in the future. Jonathan said: "We can't buy fonts due to licensing, would like adobe font options?"ĭo you mean licensing costs? Then I would only use Google Fonts that are not variable ones.
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