From e5aab40ee9eb2b8a4ed3a0911ac5ac217f5c79f6 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Matthew Butterick Date: Thu, 2 Apr 2020 15:51:08 -0700 Subject: [PATCH] yep --- quad/quad/scribblings/quad.scrbl | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/quad/quad/scribblings/quad.scrbl b/quad/quad/scribblings/quad.scrbl index 4f820e19..c0fc652f 100644 --- a/quad/quad/scribblings/quad.scrbl +++ b/quad/quad/scribblings/quad.scrbl @@ -841,7 +841,7 @@ Fallback only. Used for other glyphs not present in the currently selected font. Yes, if you're feeling lazy, you can use the name of a built-in system font family in any field that takes a family name, and Quad will comply. -If you do this, bear in mind that your source file will no longer necessarily be portable between systems, because it depends on a certain font already being available on that system. (â—Šitalic{Portable} = one can run the source file on a different machine and get an equivalent result.) I include this option because I can imagine plenty of uses for Quad where ease outweighs portability. In which case, have at it. +If you do this, bear in mind that your source file will no longer necessarily be portable between systems, because it depends on a certain font already being available on that system. (@italic{Portable} = one can run the source file on a different machine and get an equivalent result.) I include this option because I can imagine plenty of uses for Quad where ease outweighs portability. In which case, have at it. The concern abou portability pertains only to the source file. Once you generate an output PDF from the source file, the PDF itself will always be portable. Because regardless of whether you invoke a system font or project font in your source file, the font will be embedded within the PDF. The PDF will then display correctly on any platform, with the correct fonts.