Discussion:
TNR or Charlesworth?
(too old to reply)
Abrams1117
2007-06-08 19:40:13 UTC
Permalink
Im supposed to have an answer for this question.

1) Do you want your subheadings to be in TNR or Charlesworth? Do
you want them flush to the left?

What is TNR? What is Charlesworth?

Help!
Nick Spalding
2007-06-08 19:43:25 UTC
Permalink
Abrams1117 wrote, in
Post by Abrams1117
Im supposed to have an answer for this question.
1) Do you want your subheadings to be in TNR or Charlesworth? Do
you want them flush to the left?
What is TNR? What is Charlesworth?
Help!
TNR is short for the font Times New Roman. Presumably Charlesworth is
another font that I have never heard of before.
--
Nick Spalding
Skitt
2007-06-08 19:47:54 UTC
Permalink
Post by Abrams1117
Im supposed to have an answer for this question.
1) Do you want your subheadings to be in TNR or Charlesworth? Do
you want them flush to the left?
What is TNR? What is Charlesworth?
Fonts.
--
Skitt
Abrams1117
2007-06-08 19:50:47 UTC
Permalink
Post by Skitt
Post by Abrams1117
Im supposed to have an answer for this question.
1) Do you want your subheadings to be in TNR or Charlesworth? Do
you want them flush to the left?
What is TNR? What is Charlesworth?
Fonts.
--
Skitt
WOW! This is a great forum. thx, thx, thx!
R H Draney
2007-06-08 20:46:23 UTC
Permalink
Post by Abrams1117
What is Charlesworth?
About a buck fifty an hour....r
--
"You got Schadenfreude on my Weltanschauung!"
"You got Weltanschauung in my Schadenfreude!"
tony cooper
2007-06-08 21:00:50 UTC
Permalink
Post by Abrams1117
Im supposed to have an answer for this question.
1) Do you want your subheadings to be in TNR or Charlesworth? Do
you want them flush to the left?
What is TNR? What is Charlesworth?
Fonts: Times New Roman and Charlesworth. Charlesworth is a standard
font supplied with Microsoft Windows fonts. No lower case, and
artsy-fartsy. I can't imagine where it would be used. You can see it
here in Italics:
http://www.fontseek.com/cgi-bin/fsearch.pl?search=Charlesworth&x=36&y=21
--
Tony Cooper
Orlando, FL
Skitt
2007-06-08 21:17:23 UTC
Permalink
Post by tony cooper
Post by Abrams1117
Im supposed to have an answer for this question.
1) Do you want your subheadings to be in TNR or Charlesworth? Do
you want them flush to the left?
What is TNR? What is Charlesworth?
Fonts: Times New Roman and Charlesworth. Charlesworth is a standard
font supplied with Microsoft Windows fonts.
It is not on my computer. I have 277 fonts, but Charlesworth is not among
them.
Post by tony cooper
No lower case, and
artsy-fartsy. I can't imagine where it would be used. You can see it
http://www.fontseek.com/cgi-bin/fsearch.pl?search=Charlesworth&x=36&y=21
Headings?
--
Skitt
tony cooper
2007-06-08 22:04:00 UTC
Permalink
On Fri, 08 Jun 2007 17:00:50 -0400, tony cooper
Post by tony cooper
Post by Abrams1117
Im supposed to have an answer for this question.
1) Do you want your subheadings to be in TNR or Charlesworth? Do
you want them flush to the left?
What is TNR? What is Charlesworth?
Fonts: Times New Roman and Charlesworth. Charlesworth is a standard
font supplied with Microsoft Windows fonts. No lower case, and
artsy-fartsy. I can't imagine where it would be used. You can see it
http://www.fontseek.com/cgi-bin/fsearch.pl?search=Charlesworth&x=36&y=21
I checked by doing the drop-down fonts in Adobe Photoshop and then in
the word processing module of Open Office. It's in both, and the
source is C:\Windows\Fonts. I haven't added fonts, so it was there
when I bought the machine.
--
Tony Cooper
Orlando, FL
Skitt
2007-06-08 22:11:25 UTC
Permalink
Post by tony cooper
Post by tony cooper
Post by Abrams1117
Im supposed to have an answer for this question.
1) Do you want your subheadings to be in TNR or Charlesworth? Do
you want them flush to the left?
What is TNR? What is Charlesworth?
Fonts: Times New Roman and Charlesworth. Charlesworth is a standard
font supplied with Microsoft Windows fonts. No lower case, and
artsy-fartsy. I can't imagine where it would be used. You can see
http://www.fontseek.com/cgi-bin/fsearch.pl?search=Charlesworth&x=36&y=21
I checked by doing the drop-down fonts in Adobe Photoshop and then in
the word processing module of Open Office. It's in both, and the
source is C:\Windows\Fonts. I haven't added fonts, so it was there
when I bought the machine.
The above looks like an answer to my previous post.

What's Open Office? I don't have that. I have Office 2000 Premium. Maybe
that's where the font differences lie.

I do have a few extra fonts for Latvian language.
--
Skitt
Roland Hutchinson
2007-06-09 01:49:40 UTC
Permalink
Post by Skitt
What's Open Office?
The leading open-source replacement for Microsoft Office.

"OpenOffice.org is a multiplatform and multilingual office suite and an
open-source project. Compatible with all other major office suites, the
product is free to download, use, and distribute."

-- http://www.openoffice.org
--
Roland Hutchinson Will play viola da gamba for food.

NB mail to my.spamtrap [at] verizon.net is heavily filtered to
remove spam. If your message looks like spam I may not see it.
Skitt
2007-06-09 01:53:34 UTC
Permalink
Post by Roland Hutchinson
Post by Skitt
What's Open Office?
The leading open-source replacement for Microsoft Office.
"OpenOffice.org is a multiplatform and multilingual office suite and
an open-source project. Compatible with all other major office
suites, the product is free to download, use, and distribute."
-- http://www.openoffice.org
Ah, maybe *it* comes with a Charlesworth font (that's what this was about).
--
Skitt
trying to dip from the font of knowledge
Roland Hutchinson
2007-06-09 03:38:01 UTC
Permalink
Post by Skitt
Post by Roland Hutchinson
Post by Skitt
What's Open Office?
The leading open-source replacement for Microsoft Office.
"OpenOffice.org is a multiplatform and multilingual office suite and
an open-source project. Compatible with all other major office
suites, the product is free to download, use, and distribute."
-- http://www.openoffice.org
Ah, maybe *it* comes with a Charlesworth font (that's what this was about).
No sign of Charlesworth here. (OO.o 2.2 installed on Ubuntu 7.04).
--
Roland Hutchinson Will play viola da gamba for food.

NB mail to my.spamtrap [at] verizon.net is heavily filtered to
remove spam. If your message looks like spam I may not see it.
John Kane
2007-06-09 11:00:59 UTC
Permalink
Post by Skitt
Post by Roland Hutchinson
Post by Skitt
What's Open Office?
The leading open-source replacement for Microsoft Office.
"OpenOffice.org is a multiplatform and multilingual office suite and
an open-source project. Compatible with all other major office
suites, the product is free to download, use, and distribute."
--http://www.openoffice.org
Ah, maybe *it* comes with a Charlesworth font (that's what this was about).
Not as far as I know. OOo does not come with any special fonts. At
least in Windows, it simply uses the installed system fontd.

I see that I have Charleworth in OOo and Word with Windows XP.
Perhaps it was added to the XP package?
Mike Lyle
2007-06-09 17:28:25 UTC
Permalink
[...]
Post by John Kane
Post by Skitt
Post by Roland Hutchinson
--http://www.openoffice.org
Ah, maybe *it* comes with a Charlesworth font (that's what this was about).
Not as far as I know. OOo does not come with any special fonts. At
least in Windows, it simply uses the installed system fontd.
I see that I have Charleworth in OOo and Word with Windows XP.
Perhaps it was added to the XP package?
It isn't in my XP Word. But, hey, that's the consistent reliability we
pay MS all that money for: market forces will always protect the
consumer better than any government tinkering. (Not that I actually
_want_ Charlesworth.)
--
Mike.
--
Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com
tony cooper
2007-06-09 02:11:47 UTC
Permalink
Post by Skitt
Post by tony cooper
Post by tony cooper
Post by Abrams1117
Im supposed to have an answer for this question.
1) Do you want your subheadings to be in TNR or Charlesworth? Do
you want them flush to the left?
What is TNR? What is Charlesworth?
Fonts: Times New Roman and Charlesworth. Charlesworth is a standard
font supplied with Microsoft Windows fonts. No lower case, and
artsy-fartsy. I can't imagine where it would be used. You can see
http://www.fontseek.com/cgi-bin/fsearch.pl?search=Charlesworth&x=36&y=21
I checked by doing the drop-down fonts in Adobe Photoshop and then in
the word processing module of Open Office. It's in both, and the
source is C:\Windows\Fonts. I haven't added fonts, so it was there
when I bought the machine.
The above looks like an answer to my previous post.
What's Open Office? I don't have that. I have Office 2000 Premium. Maybe
that's where the font differences lie.
I do have a few extra fonts for Latvian language.
Open Office is the Sun Microsystems open source multiplatform office
productivity sheet. Free for the downloading. It contains a word
processing program and a spreadsheet program.

My Word Perfect became corrupted, so I switched to OO. Very little
difference. It opens MS Word documents and the spreadsheet opens
Excel documents.

No fonts come with it. The fonts are from the original Windows XP
installation.
--
Tony Cooper
Orlando, FL
tony cooper
2007-06-09 02:15:02 UTC
Permalink
On Fri, 08 Jun 2007 22:11:47 -0400, tony cooper
Post by tony cooper
Post by Skitt
Post by tony cooper
Post by tony cooper
Post by Abrams1117
Im supposed to have an answer for this question.
1) Do you want your subheadings to be in TNR or Charlesworth? Do
you want them flush to the left?
What is TNR? What is Charlesworth?
Fonts: Times New Roman and Charlesworth. Charlesworth is a standard
font supplied with Microsoft Windows fonts. No lower case, and
artsy-fartsy. I can't imagine where it would be used. You can see
http://www.fontseek.com/cgi-bin/fsearch.pl?search=Charlesworth&x=36&y=21
I checked by doing the drop-down fonts in Adobe Photoshop and then in
the word processing module of Open Office. It's in both, and the
source is C:\Windows\Fonts. I haven't added fonts, so it was there
when I bought the machine.
The above looks like an answer to my previous post.
What's Open Office? I don't have that. I have Office 2000 Premium. Maybe
that's where the font differences lie.
I do have a few extra fonts for Latvian language.
Open Office is the Sun Microsystems open source multiplatform office
productivity sheet
suite
Post by tony cooper
Free for the downloading. It contains a word
processing program and a spreadsheet program.
My Word Perfect became corrupted, so I switched to OO. Very little
difference. It opens MS Word documents and the spreadsheet opens
Excel documents.
No fonts come with it. The fonts are from the original Windows XP
installation.
--
Tony Cooper
Orlando, FL
Skitt
2007-06-09 02:27:46 UTC
Permalink
Post by tony cooper
Post by Skitt
Post by tony cooper
Post by tony cooper
Post by Abrams1117
Im supposed to have an answer for this question.
1) Do you want your subheadings to be in TNR or Charlesworth? Do
you want them flush to the left?
What is TNR? What is Charlesworth?
Fonts: Times New Roman and Charlesworth. Charlesworth is a
standard font supplied with Microsoft Windows fonts. No lower
case, and artsy-fartsy. I can't imagine where it would be used.
http://www.fontseek.com/cgi-bin/fsearch.pl?search=Charlesworth&x=36&y=21
I checked by doing the drop-down fonts in Adobe Photoshop and then
in the word processing module of Open Office. It's in both, and the
source is C:\Windows\Fonts. I haven't added fonts, so it was there
when I bought the machine.
The above looks like an answer to my previous post.
What's Open Office? I don't have that. I have Office 2000 Premium.
Maybe that's where the font differences lie.
I do have a few extra fonts for Latvian language.
Open Office is the Sun Microsystems open source multiplatform office
productivity sheet. Free for the downloading. It contains a word
processing program and a spreadsheet program.
My Word Perfect became corrupted, so I switched to OO. Very little
difference. It opens MS Word documents and the spreadsheet opens
Excel documents.
No fonts come with it. The fonts are from the original Windows XP
installation.
Then that is still a mystery -- my original Windows XP installation (it came
with this computer) doesn't have the Charlesworth font.
--
Skitt
the Charlesworth font is dry
tony cooper
2007-06-09 02:57:09 UTC
Permalink
Post by Skitt
Post by tony cooper
No fonts come with it. The fonts are from the original Windows XP
installation.
Then that is still a mystery -- my original Windows XP installation (it came
with this computer) doesn't have the Charlesworth font.
Hate to break it to you, Skitt, but it's personal. Someone doesn't
like you.
--
Tony Cooper
Orlando, FL
Nick Spalding
2007-06-09 10:51:44 UTC
Permalink
Post by tony cooper
Post by Skitt
Post by tony cooper
No fonts come with it. The fonts are from the original Windows XP
installation.
Then that is still a mystery -- my original Windows XP installation (it came
with this computer) doesn't have the Charlesworth font.
Hate to break it to you, Skitt, but it's personal. Someone doesn't
like you.
Nor me. It isn't in either my XP or Vista machine.
--
Nick Spalding
Skitt
2007-06-09 17:10:48 UTC
Permalink
Post by tony cooper
Post by Skitt
Post by tony cooper
No fonts come with it. The fonts are from the original Windows XP
installation.
Then that is still a mystery -- my original Windows XP installation
(it came with this computer) doesn't have the Charlesworth font.
Hate to break it to you, Skitt, but it's personal. Someone doesn't
like you.
I never thought that could happen!
--
Skitt
crushed
Robin Bignall
2007-06-10 21:38:46 UTC
Permalink
Post by Skitt
Post by tony cooper
Post by Skitt
Post by tony cooper
No fonts come with it. The fonts are from the original Windows XP
installation.
Then that is still a mystery -- my original Windows XP installation
(it came with this computer) doesn't have the Charlesworth font.
Hate to break it to you, Skitt, but it's personal. Someone doesn't
like you.
I never thought that could happen!
The same somebody doesn't like me, either.
--
Robin Bignall
Herts, England
Skitt
2007-06-10 23:03:16 UTC
Permalink
Post by Robin Bignall
Post by Skitt
Post by tony cooper
Post by Skitt
Post by tony cooper
No fonts come with it. The fonts are from the original Windows XP
installation.
Then that is still a mystery -- my original Windows XP installation
(it came with this computer) doesn't have the Charlesworth font.
Hate to break it to you, Skitt, but it's personal. Someone doesn't
like you.
I never thought that could happen!
The same somebody doesn't like me, either.
Let's get a loud-voiced group together and complain in a Corel fashion. We
can Draw straws for the lead.
--
Skitt
Robin Bignall
2007-06-11 21:10:07 UTC
Permalink
Post by Skitt
Post by Robin Bignall
Post by Skitt
Post by tony cooper
Post by Skitt
Post by tony cooper
No fonts come with it. The fonts are from the original Windows XP
installation.
Then that is still a mystery -- my original Windows XP installation
(it came with this computer) doesn't have the Charlesworth font.
Hate to break it to you, Skitt, but it's personal. Someone doesn't
like you.
I never thought that could happen!
The same somebody doesn't like me, either.
Let's get a loud-voiced group together and complain in a Corel fashion. We
can Draw straws for the lead.
They're waiting for us at the OK Corel, Wyatt.
--
Robin Bignall
Herts, England
John Holmes
2007-06-09 10:42:11 UTC
Permalink
Post by Skitt
Then that is still a mystery -- my original Windows XP installation
(it came with this computer) doesn't have the Charlesworth font.
It wouldn't unless you have any Corel applications installed.
Charlesworth is a Corel font, and there also appears to be a freeware
version of it.
--
Regards
John
for mail: my initials plus a u e
at tpg dot com dot au
tony cooper
2007-06-09 14:11:07 UTC
Permalink
Post by John Holmes
Post by Skitt
Then that is still a mystery -- my original Windows XP installation
(it came with this computer) doesn't have the Charlesworth font.
It wouldn't unless you have any Corel applications installed.
Charlesworth is a Corel font, and there also appears to be a freeware
version of it.
There you go then. I've been using CorelDraw since it came out. I
also have Word Perfect, but I don't know if Corel owned WP when WP10
came out. They do now.
--
Tony Cooper
Orlando, FL
Skitt
2007-06-09 17:14:24 UTC
Permalink
Post by tony cooper
Post by John Holmes
Post by Skitt
Then that is still a mystery -- my original Windows XP installation
(it came with this computer) doesn't have the Charlesworth font.
It wouldn't unless you have any Corel applications installed.
Charlesworth is a Corel font, and there also appears to be a freeware
version of it.
There you go then. I've been using CorelDraw since it came out. I
also have Word Perfect, but I don't know if Corel owned WP when WP10
came out. They do now.
That makes me feel a lot better.
--
Skitt
I'm good enough, I'm smart enough, and doggone it, people like me.
tony cooper
2007-06-09 17:57:17 UTC
Permalink
Post by Skitt
Post by tony cooper
Post by John Holmes
Post by Skitt
Then that is still a mystery -- my original Windows XP installation
(it came with this computer) doesn't have the Charlesworth font.
It wouldn't unless you have any Corel applications installed.
Charlesworth is a Corel font, and there also appears to be a freeware
version of it.
There you go then. I've been using CorelDraw since it came out. I
also have Word Perfect, but I don't know if Corel owned WP when WP10
came out. They do now.
That makes me feel a lot better.
But nobody liked you enough to give you CorelDraw.
--
Tony Cooper
Orlando, FL
R H Draney
2007-06-10 05:41:13 UTC
Permalink
Post by tony cooper
Post by Skitt
Post by tony cooper
Post by John Holmes
Post by Skitt
Then that is still a mystery -- my original Windows XP installation
(it came with this computer) doesn't have the Charlesworth font.
It wouldn't unless you have any Corel applications installed.
Charlesworth is a Corel font, and there also appears to be a freeware
version of it.
There you go then. I've been using CorelDraw since it came out. I
also have Word Perfect, but I don't know if Corel owned WP when WP10
came out. They do now.
That makes me feel a lot better.
But nobody liked you enough to give you CorelDraw.
It's not a question of being liked...he just didn't buy the brand of breakfast
cereal that had the installation disc inside....r
--
"You got Schadenfreude on my Weltanschauung!"
"You got Weltanschauung in my Schadenfreude!"
Nick Spalding
2007-06-09 10:46:53 UTC
Permalink
Post by tony cooper
I checked by doing the drop-down fonts in Adobe Photoshop and then in
the word processing module of Open Office. It's in both, and the
source is C:\Windows\Fonts. I haven't added fonts, so it was there
when I bought the machine.
It's not in mine, about four months old.
--
Nick Spalding
Garrett Wollman
2007-06-08 21:14:12 UTC
Permalink
Post by Abrams1117
Im supposed to have an answer for this question.
1) Do you want your subheadings to be in TNR or Charlesworth? Do
you want them flush to the left?
I think the right answer for the first question is almost always
"no".

-GAWollman
--
Garrett A. Wollman | The real tragedy of human existence is not that we are
***@csail.mit.edu| nasty by nature, but that a cruel structural asymmetry
Opinions not those | grants to rare events of meanness such power to shape
of MIT or CSAIL. | our history. - S.J. Gould, Ten Thousand Acts of Kindness
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