![]() ![]() Unfortunately, there are no easy solutions to this issue. One of Evernote's strengths has always been their cross-platform support, and yet one of the weaknesses has been the fact that a note written with (e.g) a Windows font would render differently when opened on an iPad or an Android phone, simply because the original font must be substituted by another available font on the other platforms. The reality is that most of the beautiful fonts available on Mac / iOS, Android, and Windows, are unique to each of those platforms. I can definitely understand your concern and frustration. ![]() Perhaps those who've been testing or using the new Windows version can comment on the fonts experience and its advantages and disadvantages on the basis of experience, rather than just my annoyed speculation.ĭave, I am sympathetic to your plight. ![]() I'm looking forward to having more font styling in the Android app, but to pay for that by having this drastic cut in Windows is an unhappy choice. #Fontcase windows full#I rarely use Google Docs, but I do know that, though it doesn't have the full set, even as a Web app it has a far more robust set of fonts than the Evernote Web client. I can put in headers and extra highlight colors in the Web version if I want them, while saving the look and customizability of my existing notes. The new Evernote would be the only Windows program I have that can't access the Windows fonts. #Fontcase windows update#When I open a note in the new program, will the formerly default Tahoma 10 be converted to, say, "Sans Serif" at whatever point size the "Normal text" style is? Or will the fonts and sizes be left alone, to become badly intermingled with text in the new manner when I edit them? Am I going to have to go through some tedious font ritual every time I edit an old note?Īll that is assuming, of course, that I ever update to the new version, which I see no reason to do. But I have thousands of notes written in the past, occasionally using something other than the default Tahoma 10, and I'm wondering what will happen to them. The "What's New" post makes the point that "a standardized font selection means your notes will look the same everywhere." Yes, that's an advantage, in some cases. Among major feature deficits is the removal of access to the full set of Windows fonts. I've been looking forward to the new editor's appearance in the Windows desktop program. ![]()
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