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Jenny
 
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Graham,

I am pretty familiar with previous versions of Word and using templates. I
did create a template and use styles within it.

But I have since fixed the problem. I was using Frutiger font as I mentioned
which I defined within the normal style in my new template and as I said as
soon as I started typing it defaulted back to Times New Roman. Since I
changed my default font in my new template to Century I have not had a
problem with it defaulting back to Times New Roman. Weird...

Frutiger is a font I've installed and Century is provided with my operating
system I think. I can't think of anything else but also can't think why this
would cause problems. I had also changed my Normal.dot default font all to no
avail.

Thanks
Jenny

"Graham Mayor" wrote:

Acrobat 5 doesn't have the same problem as 7.

The styles defined and saved in your template should hold whenever you use
that template. If the style is not defined, the one from the default
template (normal.dot) will be used.

Best plan is to open your template for editing, check the style definitions
you require. Save the template (as a template) and you shouldn't have a
problem. My guess (and it is a guess) is that you are not using styles, but
trying to avoid them. Word is a style based application and you need to be
comfortable with their use to get the best out of the application.

--

Graham Mayor - Word MVP

My web site www.gmayor.com
Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org




Jenny wrote:
Graham,

It's been a while since I had to use the document which is while it's
taken a while to get back to this and I didn't have reply
notification ticked. So to carry on...

I've got the full version of Acrobat (v5) but am using Acrobat Reader
V7. The template whose font keeps defaulting back to Times New Roman
is a template I've created myself, not called normal.dot.

Any ideas on how to fix this?

Thanks again
Jenny



"Graham Mayor" wrote:

It is not the reader that is problematical. Only the full version.

You cannot avoid using normal.dot. It is an essential system file.
You can personalise the original to some extent but for your own
personal document types you should create individual document
templates. What you can't do, and have it work correctly, is save a
document as normal.dot. Only Word can create normal.dot, so if this
is what you have done, rename normal.dot to oldnormal.dot and let
Word correct the problem.

--

Graham Mayor - Word MVP

My web site www.gmayor.com
Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org



Jenny wrote:
I do have Acrobat 7 reader. I did read somewhere about Acrobat 7
stuffing things up but didn't think it was my problem but perhaps it
is.
I created a new template and am not using normal.dot.

Thanks
Jenny

"Graham Mayor" wrote:

Do you have Acrobat 7? This prevents changes being made to the
normal.dot template?
Is this a document template you have created or did you save a
document as normal.dot? You cannot create a normal.dot template
this way.
Provided the font is installed, there is no font substitution
involved, and the active printer is capable of printing it, there
is no reason why a template set up to use a particular font
shouldn't use it.

--

Graham Mayor - Word MVP

My web site www.gmayor.com
Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org




Jenny wrote:
Hi,

I'm using Word XP and have created a new template which should not
be using Times New Roman font at all.
Yet, when I go to use the Normal style which is set to use
Frutiger, not Times New Roman, it changes to Times New Roman.
My experience with previous versions of Word did not do this, once
I'd changed a style, it would stick but it isn't now.
Is it just a setting I've missed?
Thanks

Jenny