iii. Add-on or License Extensions. If the proper license extension is purchased, you are permitted to: (1) use the Font Software to produce merchandise for sale, including alphabet-themed products; (2) embed the Fonts in editable documents; (3) use the fonts in external third party platforms; (4) share the fonts with third parties doing work on behalf of Licensee.

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I work with a graphic designer from Dubai on designing numerous graphic designs that are related to marketing. The program i was recommending to him was Affinity because of its simplicity, support and the one time purchase fee. My designer wanted to incorporate Arabic letters in the design and he downloaded a font off of the web in the form of OTF. For those of you that aren't familiar with the Arabic alphabet that the writing starts from right to left instead of the opposite. After trial and error and spending hours trying to figure out if the software supports the alphabet we came out with a conclusion: Affinity designer doesn't support Arabic/Farsi/Urdu alphabets. However, the program supports symbolic calligraphy which means the letters were treated like symbols rather than an actual font. I have a special request from the developers to update their software and make it compatible with the Arabic/Farsi/Urdu languages just like in Adobe Illustrator. I was and still (sorta) an Adobe user, but i much rather use Affinity because of it's functionality and one time purchase fee instead of the monthly subscription trap that Adobe offers.

Supplying the font is the most robust solution IMO. A couple of tips: See also the accepted answer to How do you import a font? & note the font will become an embedded resource by the time the app. is deployed. The info page for embedded resources provides tips on how to get a URL pointing to the font.

Those two sets have glyphs differing only by height it seems. The second has 3 which slant upwards, and 3 which are flat. Are these different characters? I have asked some Arabic speakers and they said no, they are not different characters (I am somewhat familiar with the Arabic alphabet). Instead they say it is for "aesthetic purposes". But they didn't explain how the font chooses which one out of the 3? How does the font decide (roughly speaking) which one to choose, if it's purely aesthetic?

I assume that its because of ligatures. As I understand the arabic written language is a flowing type. The letters need to be connected even on screen writing. So probably are there different versions of each letter because of the different sizes the glyph needs to be in connection to the letter before and after.

To your question of "how" the font decides which glyphe to take, well, thats programmed into the font. The same looking characters share the unicode but have different glyph ids. Like with fi, the font creator "told" that if (unicode) U+0066 (f) and U+0069 (i) are used immediatly next to each other, it should be replace by tha glyph-id 385. I imagine this to be a bit more work for arabic fonts than latin.

I have created name labels with masks (halo), and after I export document to PDF, the masks starts acting weird. This does not occur on Arcmap workspace, only on the exported pdf. I have converted marker symbols to polygons and compressed vector graphics. Fonts are also embedded to document.

i have this issue too especially with arabic font (using arcgis 10.3.1 without service pack) the issue wasn't exist before, i noticed it in the past few days without changing anything in my notebook settings or apps.

i am using arial fonts with halo and when exporting to jpg or pdf the halo show shifted and not aligned with the text and sometimes after exporting the image i noticed that the text letter was prolonged.

Parachute font foundry has just released their new Arabic font, DIN Serif. DIN Serif was originally designed as a low contrast typeface with functional and distinct novelties. Its solid, simple nature directed the development of its Arabic counterpart away from the traditional calligraphic styles, towards a more simplified contemporary design mixing Naskh characteristics with early Kufi style. Its Arabic letterforms carry through the feel of the original design whilst several basic characters originated on paper after many tedious trials with a traditional calligraphic bamboo pen. This provided a deeper understanding of its structure and visual rhythm, before converting the letterforms into a digital form.

I believe this is plain old Adobe Arabic. It is included with Adobe products, and is the default in Illustrator when Arabic characters are pasted or typed into a document. Looks like you can also purchase it here: -arabic

In Arabic, text is justified by adding Kashidas. Kashidas are added to arabic characters to lengthen them. Whitespace is not modified. Use automatic Kashida insertion to justify paragraphs of arabic text.

You can automatically apply ligatures to character pairs in Arabic and Hebrew. Ligatures are typographic replacement characters for certain letter pairs if they are available in a given Open Type font.


However, some Open Type fonts include more ornate, optional ligatures, which can be produced when you choose Discretionary Ligatures. These ligatures are found at Character panel > OpenType > Discretionary Ligatures.

In the Arabic script, a diacritic or a diacritical mark is a glyph used to indicate consonant length or short vowels. A diacritical mark is placed above or below the script. For better styling of text, or improved readability of certain fonts, you can control the vertical or horizontal position of diacritical marks:

When you install a Middle Eastern or North African version, the default typing font is set to the installation-specific language, by default. For example, if you have installed the English/Arabic-enabled version, the default typing font is set to Adobe Arabic. Similarly, if you have installed the English/Hebrew-enabled version, the default typing font is set to Adobe Hebrew (or Myriad Hebrew in Photoshop).

Fonts that have been traditionally used (for example, AXT fonts) can continue to be used in this release of the software. However, it is recommended that newer Open Type fonts be used for text-based elements.


A font can have alternative shapes of certain letters of the alphabet. These variations of the font face for some letters are generally available for stylistic or calligraphy purposes. In rare cases, justification alternates are used to justify and align paragraphs for specific needs. 2351a5e196

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