This layout logic for Biblical Hebrew is open source software under the MIT License see embedded license description for details. Hebrew OpenType Layout logic copyright © 2003 & 2007, Ralph Hancock & John Hudson. Monotype Type Drawing Office - Robin Nicholas, Patricia Saunders 1982
Version 1.00 - This version was supplied with Windows 3.1 and Windows for Workgroups 3.11. Version 2.00 (WGL4) - This WGL4 version of Arial is supplied with Windows 95 and Windows NT4. Version 2.00 (Win ANSI) - This Win ANSI version of Arial is supplied with Windows 95.
Version 2.01 - This special version of Arial is only supplied with the beta version of the Windows 95 euro update patch. Version 2.45 - This Win ANSI version of Arial is supplied with the US version of Windows 98. North American users can add it by installing multilanguage support. Version 2.50 - This version of Arial is supplied with European versions of Windows 98. Arial version history Version 2.55 - This WGL4 version of Arial was first supplied with the Final Windows 95 euro update that shipped on 4 November 1998.
Arial is an extremely versatile family of typefaces which can be used with equal success for text setting in reports, presentations, magazines etc, and for display use in newspapers, advertising and promotions. Terminal strokes are cut on the diagonal which helps to give the face a less mechanical appearance. The overall treatment of curves is softer and fuller than in most industrial style sans serif faces. certificate_print_text($pdf, $x, $y + 36, 'C', $fontsans,, 30, fullname($USER)) // Comment out old codeĬertificate_print_text($pdf, $x, $y + 36, 'C', 'myfont',, 30, fullname($USER)) // Add new code.A contemporary sans serif design, Arial contains more humanist characteristics than many of its predecessors and as such is more in tune with the mood of the last decades of the twentieth century.
$fontsans = get_config('certificate', 'fontsans') // Comment out old code
If that did not work, make sure you changed the. Verify that new files have been created in /lib/tcpdf/fonts: View the file at hostname/lib/tcpdf/fonts/convertfont.php (it should just show a blank page).Ĥ. Create a "convertfont.php" file in /lib/tcpdf/fonts (and ensure the web server has permissions to run it), containing:ĪddTTFfont('./MyFont.ttf', 'TrueTypeUnicode') Ĭhange MyFont.ttf to the name of the. If you encounter this problem, you might want to try using an online converter (above).ġ.
You can upload TTF (or OTF) fonts to or, and download converted versions.įonts created this way seem to handle accented characters better than converting locally.įonts created this way may not handle accented characters correctly this is probably dependant on the specific software versions. Add a font from TTF fileĪssuming you have a font licensed for converting and embedding. In the future, we plan to have fonts downloadable in a same way as languages are. In such case, pdflib.php will use this directory. You may want to manually download tcpdf package and extract its fonts/ directory into your $CFG->dataroot/fonts/. This directory contains just selected set of original tcpdf fonts in order to keep the standard Moodle distribution lightweight. Alternatively you may download all TCPDF fonts from and extract them to PDF_CUSTOM_FONT_PATH directory. If you are adding custom fonts you need to copy all fonts from lib/tcpdf/fonts/ to your PDF_CUSTOM_FONT_PATH and then add the extra fonts. If PDF_CUSTOM_FONT_PATH exists, this directory will be used instead of lib/tcpdf/fonts/, the default location is $CFG->dataroot.'/fonts/'. The default location for fonts that are included with TCPDF is lib/tcpdf/fonts/.