

Thank you so much for your time, I admit I'm terribly ignorant when it comes to how fonts function in this manner. I suppose I'm out of luck in that case.Ĭould this be an issue with my system? I'm on windows 10 using inkscape version 0.92. I'm guessing that "p9_g_d0_f25" doesn't indicate an actual font, but rather some encoding present in the initial svg that inkscape can't interpret. We are waiting for libpango to implement proper support of the user-fonts feature. How could I identify the font being used in the original svg? Inspect element identifies it as " font-family: "p9_g_d0_f25",sans-serif ", which is exactly the same as what inkscape identifies it as, but(!) says the font is not located on the computer, so I guess it's defaulting to sans-serif which is much larger. You can design fonts within Inkscape, but using them to render text on the canvas is not yet supported. Opera will open it correctly but you'll have to edit the name to be svg if you want firefox to open it correctly. I've attached the original svgz file giving me trouble. Originally I have spotted the problem on quite a complex sketch, which I'd prefer not to disclose - but I've been able to reproduce this within minutes starting from an empty file and 2-3 strings, reliably.Apologies, it appears the problem is more complicated than I imagined.

I'm attaching two files: an SVG source and a PDF export, containing just a single string "a". But you don't really need to go as far as that.

If this still doesn't trigger an error (which it often does already), try inserting some non-ASCII characters, such as a couple "accuted" glyphs from the ISO-LATIN2 charset or cs-CZ locale.

Try highlighting a block inside the string and make it bold. I know that this is rather a bug report for Adobe :-)Īdobe community fora suggest that this has to do with embedded fonts, and indeed, if I disable "Embed fonts" and instead "Convert text to paths", the resulting file is okay for Acrobat Reader. Adobe Reader does not crash, but refuses to open the file, reporting a random error number, one of 114 117 135. After installing Inkscape 1.02 (release), I have noticed that when I export a PDF (= File -> Save As), the resulting file does not open in Adobe Reader.
