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5. To replace the font, select the new font you want to use from the Replace With list, and do
one of the following:
• Click Change to change just that instance of the selected font.
• Click Change/Find to change that instance and then find the next instance.
• Click Change All to change all instances of the fonts selected in the list.
When there are no more instances of a font in your file, that font name is removed from
the Fonts in Document list.
Note:
To change fonts in imported graphics, use the program that originally exported the
graphic, and then use the InDesign Links palette to replace or relink the graphic in the
InDesign document.
6. If you clicked Change, click Find Next to locate the next instance of the font.
7. Click Done.
Tip:
If you want to change multiple fonts to the same font, you can select more than one font
in the list. However, you can only find font instances or view font details when a single font
is selected in the list.
Managing links and relinking imported files
When you open a file that contains missing or modified links to placed files, InDesign dis-
plays an alert and provides several features that make it easy for you to resolve link-related
problems in customer files. To resolve the problems right away, click the Fix Links button.
You’ll be asked to relink to any missing links, and any modified links (files on disk which
have been modified since being placed in the InDesign document) are updated automatically.
InDesign allows you to relink to files with different names and even different types (for
example, you can relink to a TIFF file rather than the original EPS file); all transformations
and cropping applied to the original linked graphic are preserved when you relink, even if
you relink to a different file or the same file under a different name.