![]() ![]() From late 2002 to mid 2003, Adobe phased out sales of multiple master fonts. ![]() In some cases, this may be worked around by installing the fonts in the application's own fonts folder or the Application Support folder as described above.Īdobe stopped making new MM and Type 1 fonts in 1999, and there is no equivalent to MM in the newer OpenType format. Just put the fonts in the the Fonts folder in the application's folder, or the Application Support/Adobe/Fonts folder.Īdditionally, the above-mentioned Adobe applications may have problems accessing all multiple master instances, when accessing the MM fonts which are installed at the system level, even in Mac OS X 10.2 and later. You can rely on the native font imaging support in these applications, which is largely independent of the OS. There is a workaround for some Adobe applications, such as InDesign 2, Illustrator 10 and Photoshop 7. They still need ATM for supporting Type 1 fonts, including multiple master fonts. Note that applications running in "Classic" mode are unaffected. The two most common "cocoa" applications are TextEdit and Keynote. This problem is fixed in OS X version 10.2 and later for applications using the "carbon" APIs, but not for applications using "cocoa" APIs. With versions 10.0 and 10.1, Mac OS X's native support for Type 1 and OpenType initially failed to include support for multiple master Type 1 fonts. ![]() (This notice has been updated repeatedly to discuss: OS X 10.2, Adobe app bugs with 10.2 support, "cocoa" applications Adobe phasing out MM font sales Adobe discontinuing tech support for MM fonts. ![]()
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