For instance some cuts of Gill MT do not display correctly (showing Gill Sans as Inline Gill) or not showing at all. There do seem to be naming/representation issues with Fonts like Gill. Some of this reminds me of font ID problems when going from OS9 to OSX. Within Keynote there is still an issue with some font families not appearing as open/available - yet are open when viewed ![]() I can deal with some subsequent font substitution as my text is now represented. I cannot say whether all of the above needed to be done, but that has worked for me. Started using Font Book - loaded fonts and validated them all (out of 1000's of Fonts I only had 6 or so minor problems) Uninstalled my font management program (FontAgent pro - that stung, as I had 150+ of bespoke sets)Ĭonverting old Type 1 Fonts to OpenType using FontXchange (which cost me $90), but I could batch convert and I have a very large collection of Fonts some I bought from suppliers that no longer exist. Removing **all** Type1Postscript Fonts - they were showing in Get Info as executable (!?!) What I got rid of the ?Glyphs for me was: I am now running 12.2.1 (clean install), that was no fix. ![]() I already tried "validating" the fonts without success It looks as if Keynote "interprets" fonts differently on High Sierra and Mojava. BUT: Now I see the same weird warning on the machine running High Sierra. Saving and opening the presentation again works fine. On the Mojava machine, I "replaced" these fonts with, well, themselves. So even if the operating system would install slightly different versions of the fonts, at least the manually installed ones should be really identically. Some of these fonts are standard fonts (like Courier, Helvetica, Monaco), and some fonts were installed manually (e.g. However all these fonts are actually installed. When I open this keynote on a machine running Mojave, Keynote complains about missing fonts. ![]() High Sierra problem I have created a couple of Keynotes presentations on a machine running High Sierra.
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