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Hebrew fonts in word 2016
Hebrew fonts in word 2016








hebrew fonts in word 2016
  1. Hebrew fonts in word 2016 pdf#
  2. Hebrew fonts in word 2016 pro#

This does *not* work for Japanese or Chinese. Make a paragraph style out of it, and modify for the RTL text in your document. Hold down Command/Ctrl and choose “Fill with Placeholder Text.” Choose Arabic or Hebrew and place the text. One other tip: if you just need RTL paragraph direction, but not story, table or document direction, you can use Placeholder text. It’s definitely worth checking out.Īnd, in case you’re wondering, the 2nd edition of JFD will be out in the spring. Of course, once I got one of these paragraphs set up, I saved it as a paragraph style, so it was easy to apply to all the other Hebrew I pasted in.Īs I noted earlier, World Tools isn’t just for Hebrew - it works on a wide variety of languages, including vertical Japanese and Chinese text, Korean, and so on. World Tools does far more than that, of course, but that’s the main thing I needed. With one click, the punctuation moved to the correct place. Harbs at In-Tools was kind enough to send me a copy of the plug-in to try, and - holy mackerel - it works great! To get everything you need, you have to either use the ME or CJK versions of InDesign or use the (much less expensive) World Tools plug-in. In it she mentioned that InDesign can do most of the Hebrew (or Arabic, Chinese, Japanese, or Korean) typesetting properly, but not everything.

Hebrew fonts in word 2016 pro#

That flipped the text around and applied the diacritical marks properly:īut remember that Hebrew reads right to left, so what’s that dot (period) doing at the right end of the text? This would have completely flummoxed me, except that I had just read Diane Burns’ excellent InDesign Magazine review of the World Tools Pro plug-in from In-Tools. And then I remembered: Turn on the World Ready Paragraph Composer from the Control panel menu:

Hebrew fonts in word 2016 pdf#

Unfortunately, I neglected to learn Hebrew in my youth, so it wasn’t until I compared this with a PDF that Ted sent me that I realized it was totally messed up. Obviously, the wrong font was being applied, so I selected the text, chose Adobe Hebrew (an OpenType font which ships with InDesign, I believe), and set the paragraph to Right Aligned (because Hebrew is read right to left): I opened the HTML file in Safari, copied the text out, and pasted it into an InDesign text frame? where it showed up as pink rectangles: So Ted would write in his Hebrew word processor, save it as an HTML file, and send that to me. More after the jump! Continue reading below↓įree and Premium members see fewer ads! Sign up and log-in today. But then someone suggested we copy and paste from a Web browser, and believe it or not, it worked! Similarly, copy and paste from a word processor didn’t work. The text got messed up, the fonts were a disaster? we could not get it to work. My co-author sent me various files with Hebrew in them and I tried to place them into my American version of InDesign. With the help of InDesign and a great plug-in, we were able to accomplish the task easily. Plus, we were able to add some stuff that had to be cut from the first edition, and add one whole new chapter.īut this blog post isn’t about the book it’s about the Hebrew in the book! We didn’t include a lot of Hebrew - mostly just blessings in one appendix. We found the idea rather funny after all, what has changed in Judaism in the past 12 years? But it turns out that with the help of a terrific editor we were able to make a much cleaner, clearer book. I like to point out that this is one book where I’m really The Dummy!Īnyway, last year the publisher asked us to work on a second edition. As you may know, I’m the author or co-author of several other books, including Judaism For Dummies (with Rabbi Ted Falcon). I’m feeling grateful and wanted to share it with the world.










Hebrew fonts in word 2016