Cidfontf1 — Font New

8 0 obj << /Type /Font /Subtype /CIDFontType2 % TrueType-based CIDFont /BaseFont /MS-Mincho % Base font name /CIDSystemInfo << /Registry (Adobe) /Ordering (Japan1) /Supplement 5 >> /FontDescriptor 9 0 R % Reference to font descriptor /DW 1000 % Default width /W [ 1 [ 500 ] ] % Widths for specific CIDs >> endobj

The introduction of CIDFontF1 Font New has numerous benefits for designers, developers, and businesses:

Sometimes, specialized PDF readers handle unembedded fonts poorly. Try opening the file using a modern web browser: Right-click your problematic PDF file. Select . Choose Google Chrome , Microsoft Edge , or Mozilla Firefox . cidfontf1 font new

There are three primary reasons why this font suddenly appears and disrupts your documents: 1. Missing Font Embedding

If you own Adobe Acrobat Pro and need to fix a document you are distributing to others: Open the PDF in Acrobat Pro. Navigate to > Print Production > Preflight . Search for the fixup profile named "Embed missing fonts" . Click Analyze and Fix . 8 0 obj &lt;&lt; /Type /Font /Subtype /CIDFontType2

If you have ever dug into the raw structure of a PDF file—perhaps to debug a corrupted document, analyze a malformed report, or extract text from a proprietary form—you may have stumbled upon a cryptic line inside the fonts dictionary: .

After remapping, the text becomes extractable and searchable. Choose Google Chrome , Microsoft Edge , or Mozilla Firefox

If you can open the file but the text is dots or garbled, but you can see the text in a preview: