Specifying the Drive for Your New Fonts
Press the 'Place new fonts on' pop-up at the top of the window
to display a list of hard drives on which you can save your new
font library. If you have more than one mounted disk drive, Font
Box displays an option labeled 'All local drives'. Select this
option if you want a copy of the clean fonts on all your drives.
If you are using Font Box Network Edition and any disk drives
are mounted, you also see an option labeled 'All mounted drives'.
Select this option if you want to copy your new font library to
all the networked disk volumes.
NOTE: Most fonts are not freeware. If you are having Font Box
save fonts onto multiple systems, make sure you have valid licenses
for each system.
Specifying Folders for Your New Fonts
After telling Font Box the disks where you want to store your
new fonts, you must specify the folders in which to put them.
You do so by clicking a set of radio buttons and checkboxes shown
in the New Fonts section of the Create Font Box Library window
shown above.
Current Folder Locations
If your fonts are very well organized and you want your new fonts
organized in the same folders, click the round radio button labeled
'Place back in current folders'. Note that this option is not
available in the Personal Edition.
.dmg/Inside Macworld/Font Box 2.6 (FAT)/Manual support/images/ExistingFolders.gif)
Moving New Fonts to System Folder
If you have a small font collection, you may want all of them
to be available all the time. If so, click the radio button labeled
Place in Fonts folder in System folder.
NOTE: There are two important issues to understand if you choose
this option:
- When you place fonts in the Fonts folder, they consume memory
and are opened by every application you run.
- If you have also chosen to copy your new fonts to multiple hard
drives, Font Box copies the new fonts only to hard drives that
have System folders.
Building a New Font Library
If you have a reasonable number of fonts or are unsure how well
organized your font collection is, you should click the radio
button labeled Place in 'Font Box Library' folder.
Font Box will then place your new fonts in a folder named Font
Box Library in the root folder of each drive you selected earlier.
If a folder by that name already exists, Font Box creates 'Font
Box Library 1', and so on.
Next, you use the pop-up menu to the right of the radio button
to specify the organization of folders in your new library. You
can choose to store you fonts:
- at one level
- in alphabetical subfolders
- by current parent folder
Each of these organization methods are explained below. Note that
these options are not available in the Personal Edition.
At one level
This option causes Font Box to place all fonts directly in the
Font Box Library folder, not in subfolders. If you have many fonts,
you may want to choose another option.
.dmg/Inside Macworld/Font Box 2.6 (FAT)/Manual support/images/OneFolder.gif)
In alphabetical subfolders
If you choose this option, Font Box creates sub-folders named
A, B, C through Z in the Font Box Library folder and places new
fonts into their appropriate folders based on their names. Select
this option if you have a large font library that you wish to
organize by name.
.dmg/Inside Macworld/Font Box 2.6 (FAT)/Manual support/images/AlphaFolders.gif)
By current parent folder
This option tells Font Box to create subfolders in the Font Box
Library folder named for the folders that contain your old fonts.
For example, if your fonts are organized in folders named Serif,
Sans Serif, Symbols and Bar Codes, Font Box creates four subfolders
by those names in the Font Box Library folder and places each
of your new fonts in the folder that corresponds to its current
parent folder.
NOTE: If you're analyzing multiple drives and saving by parent
folder, Font Box displays a pop-up labeled 'Master'. Select the
drive whose folder organization you want Font Box to use if it
finds fonts of the same name in parent folders named differently.
.dmg/Inside Macworld/Font Box 2.6 (FAT)/Manual support/images/ParentFolders.gif)
Locating Macintosh System Fonts
If you check this box, Font Box moves the Macintosh System fonts
- Adobe Sans MM, Adobe Serif MM, Chicago, Courier, Espy Sans,
Geneva, Helvetica, Monaco, New York, Palatino, Symbol, and Times
- to the Fonts folder in the System folder. Use this option if
you keep most of your fonts outside the Fonts folder.
Moving the system fonts safeguards against accidently re-installing
these fonts, and creating duplicates when you install new System
software.
Creating Separate Folders for Each Font
Click the checkbox labeled 'Place each font in separate folder'
to create a new folder named for each of your fonts. This option
works regardless of how you choose to organize your font library.
In other words, you can choose to place new fonts in their own
folder, which is in turn inside alphabetical folders, which is
inside the Font Box Library folder:
Naming Your New Suitcases
To have Font Box identify whether a font suitcase is in Type 1
or TrueType format, check the box labeled 'Add t1 or tt to suitcase
names'. By default, Font Box adds a .t1 or .tt suffix to suitcase
names (e.g., Times.t1). If you don't want these identifiers, turn
the check box off. Note that if the suitcase name is the same
as the corresponding PostScript printer font name, Font Box adds
the suffix automatically.
Moving Old Fonts
After creating your new font library, you can move your old fonts
from wherever they may be buried into the Old Fonts folder or
the Trash.
Move Old Fonts to One Folder
To consolidate all your old fonts in one place, click the radio
button labeled 'Move to 'Old Fonts' folder'. Font Box moves old
suitcases as well as unmatched and duplicate Postscript fonts
to a folder called 'Old Fonts'.
Move Old Fonts to the Trash
Select this button to have Font Box move your old fonts to the
Trash. As a safeguard, to permanently delete the old fonts, you
must still empty the Trash.
Don't Move Old Fonts
Check this box to leave your old fonts where they are. If you
select this option and want to use your new fonts later, you may
want to come back and clean up some of your old fonts manually.
Starting Your Font Analysis
When you are finished specifying destination options, click the
'Continue' button to begin your font analysis request. To stop
your analysis request, click Cancel.
To stop your analysis at any time, press Command-period.
|