Hi David
![Not Not](/uploads/1/1/8/6/118670313/915029647.jpg)
Am Donnerstag, 17. November 2016 17:13:25 UTC+1 schrieb David Gohel:Hi
![Wingdings not working in word for mac os Wingdings not working in word for mac os](https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/52b5f43ee4b02301e647b446/1445209701997-DJ5XZ946N3TVIFEW7Y92/ke17ZwdGBToddI8pDm48kJGlYxH-WXqdxTRkax7nMYIUqsxRUqqbr1mOJYKfIPR7LoDQ9mXPOjoJoqy81S2I8N_N4V1vUb5AoIIIbLZhVYxCRW4BPu10St3TBAUQYVKcXxgAXL9LDqNAE905a5A-22w7ceP89Bk67CyJNlesuJV_MaN4Vu7uG68841PyQ1b-/Webding+Wingding+Icon+Cheat+Sheet+Character+Map+Symbols)
Le jeudi 17 novembre 2016 17:06:06 UTC+1, Fred a écrit :
At a guess, the Wingdings fonts are used for bullets. Note that you could also try deleting the ListGal.dat file in your Windows user profile and see if that fixes the crashing bulleted lists. To locate the file, first display hidden files and folders in File Explorer/Windows Explorer. Stefan Blom, Microsoft Word MVP.
- The Wingdings characters can be accessed in a Unicode-compliant manner, via the 'Private Use Area' (codepoints U+E000 to U+F7FF).These character codes are reserved for any font-specific symbols not part of the regular Unicode character set, and indeed Wingdingds maps all of its symbols to the subrange U+F021 to U+F0FF. For instance, the triangular flag, which is mapped to P = 0x50 in legacy.
- This site contains user submitted content, comments and opinions and is for informational purposes only. Apple may provide or recommend responses as a possible solution based on the information provided; every potential issue may involve several factors not detailed in the conversations captured in an electronic forum and Apple can therefore provide no guarantee as to the.
- A Wingdings chart for when you need it. Users who want to add a little charm or decoration to their projects or designs can choose to do it with the famous Wingdings font. Wingdings contains symbols instead of alphanumeric characters (letters and numbers), using a different picture for each character. Wingdings and other fonts like Webdings are called dingbat fonts. These two were created.
- I'am not really familiar with ubuntu and changing system files is not straightforward with the mac. I also read that changing system fonts can lead to problems. So I am a bit uneasy with doing this, but maybe this is the price to get the full potential of your great package.
Thanks for your quick response!
I did not manage to run it yet. I checked my fonts with the Font Book. Calibri was not installed, so I fixed that. Now I should have all default fonts. But addPlot still produces the same error. I tried to check the available fonts from within R with the help of fonts() out of the extrafonts-package. It shows me this:
[4] 'AppleMyungjo' 'Arial Black' 'Arial'
[7] 'Arial Narrow' 'Arial Rounded MT Bold' 'Arial Unicode MS'
[13] 'Brush Script MT' 'Calibri' 'Cambria'
[16] 'Candara' 'Circular Air Light' 'Comic Sans MS'
[22] 'Courier New' 'DIN Alternate' 'DIN Condensed'
[28] 'Lao Sangam MN' 'Lato' 'Lato Light'
Word Wingdings Keyboard
[31] 'Lato Semibold' 'Luminari' 'Microsoft Sans Serif'
[37] 'Trebuchet MS' 'Verdana' 'Webdings'
'Courier New' 'Times New Roman' and 'Calibri' are there. However, 'Symbol' is missing. I could not find a way to make Symbol available to R. Then again, I am not even sure, if this really is the way to check availability of fonts as 'Helevetica' is missing in the list and I know that R uses 'Helevetica'.
So I tried the second option you suggested and specify available fonts with addPlot()
doc <- addPlot(doc, function() print(bp), vector.graphic = TRUE,
fontname_sans = 'Calibri',
fontname_symbol = 'Wingdings')
It did not work.
![Not Not](/uploads/1/1/8/6/118670313/915029647.jpg)
I also tried
doc <- addPlot(doc, function() print(bp), vector.graphic = TRUE,
fontname_sans = 'Helvetica',
fontname_symbol = 'Helvetica')
which did not work either.
I googled quit a lot, but I could not find a solution to solve this fonts issue.
I googled quit a lot, but I could not find a solution to solve this fonts issue.
Any further hints?
All the best,
Fred
Fred
Am Donnerstag, 17. November 2016 17:13:25 UTC+1 schrieb David Gohel:Hi
It means you don't have fonts needed by the graphical device (Microsoft fonts to match default values of ReporteRs). In addPlot, corresponding arguments are:
fontname_serif, fontname_sans, fontname_mono, fontname_symbol | font names for font faces. Use fonts available on operating system. |
fontname_serif = 'Times New Roman', fontname_sans = 'Calibri',
fontname_mono = 'Courier New', fontname_symbol = 'Symbol'
First solution is to install those fonts. Another solution would be to specify fontnames corresponding to thoses on your system.
David Le jeudi 17 novembre 2016 17:06:06 UTC+1, Fred a écrit :
Hi there,
somehow I am not able to placeeditable vector graphs in either word or powerPoint documents, but only when I use my mac.
I do the following:
Wingdings Not Working In Word For Macs
#------------------------------------
require( ReporteRs )
require( ggplot2 )
doc <- pptx()
doc <- addSlide(doc,'Two Content' )
myplot <- ggplot(data=PlantGrowth,aes(x=group, y=weight, fill=group))+
geom_boxplot()
Using Wingdings In Word
doc <- addPlot(doc,function() print(myplot), vector.graphic = FALSE )
doc <- addPlot(doc,function() print(myplot), vector.graphic = TRUE )
Error ineval(substitute(expr), envir, enclos) :
Fontconfig error: unable to match fontpattern
#------------------------------------
Microsoft Word Wingdings
Everything works fine untilthe last line.
I must be a problem related tothe mac (I am using El Capitan and java version “1.6.0_65) as the same codeworks well with a windows workstation. On both systems I used the newestversions of R (version 3.3.2 (2016-10-31) -- 'Sincere Pumpkin Patch').
I am not able to fix thisissue. Any solutions or hints?
Kind regards,
Kind regards,
Fred
I had a problem today in that I was writing about the Mac but using a PC. I needed to type the character for the Command key on the Mac keyboard which, as you might know, is this cute twirly shape. But since I was working on a PC I didn’t have fonts which contained the character. After an hour or so of research, I found the character.
As luck would have it, it was where I should have looked to begin with, in my Wingdings font. To get it, in any document or any application that supports fonts, click to use the Wingdings font and type the lowercase z – voila – the Command key character.
So far, so good. But what about the other keys, like the Apple key and the Alt key on older keyboards? In the interests of helping you get everything you need in one post, if not in one font, here’s how to get hold of the characters for the Apple key and the Alt key:
Turns out the Alt key symbol isn’t as easy to find as it might be. Probably the quickest way to locate it is to download the free font Virtue from the ScooterGraphics site.
Once installed the font contains a range of characters including the Mac Alt key symbol and the Apple icon. To get the Alt key select the Virtue font and type Alt + 0221 on the keyboard. The Apple symbol is a little more difficult as it is a hex value so, switch to Virtue font, type F000 into a Word document and immediately (don’t press space) press Alt + X. This little bit of keyboard magic creates the little Apple logo for you. If you need it elsewhere, make it in Word and copy and paste it to the application you need to use it in.
Type In Wingdings
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