Office Chinese Font
Calibri does not contain Chinese characters. When you set your font to Calibri, Microsoft Office automatically choose a Chinese font for Chinese you’ve entered. In your case, it seems that Excel automatically chose Microsoft Yahei (微软雅黑), while Powerpoint automatically chose STXinwei (华文新魏). They are both correct behaviors.
Dear Vardhaman, 1, By mention 'alter from Chinese to English, I meant that, in my article in word, outlook or onenote, I use both Chinese and English 2, Intending to practice my English, I installed an English version of office by office 365 subscription, so I only want all office software to be displayed in English but not in Chinese 3, I've installed the Language package here My issue is: In my articles, when I type in some Chinese characters, they could not be displayed properly in word, outlook or onenote. Kassetnij pchelopaviljon chertezh. After checking the fonts of these Chinese characters, I find out it seams to set these characters in SimSun fonts, it's a basic Chinese font but gives a very basic display appearance too, but I don't know how to add fonts to office to make these characters displayed properly. Hello, Thank you for reply. The link you have provided is for installing Language Interface Pack.
The Office Language Interface Pack is a translated user interface that installs on top of a copy of Microsoft Office, providing Microsoft Excel, OneNote, Outlook, PowerPoint and Word features to display in a different language. It would not helpful in changing font you are using to write. However you can download fonts from the Internet. Some fonts on the Internet are sold commercially, some are distributed as shareware, and some are free. After you find a font that you would like to use with an Office application, you can download it and install it through the operating system that you are currently using on your computer.
Because fonts work with the operating system, they are not downloaded to Office directly. In Windows 10 you may right click or double click on the downloaded font and look for Install option.
I hope the above information helps. If you have any other queries related to this, feel free to reply and I'll be happy to further assist you.
I've set up Microsoft Chinese Input on Windows 7. I've noticed that whenever I enter characters, they appear in a muddy looking font with random line thicknesses, making the characters pretty illegible. Selecting the characters and manually changing the font to 'SimHei' or 'SimSun' makes the characters readable. The selected illegible characters just list my default font, 'Times New Roman,' so I'm not sure what system Chinese font I'm actually getting. I'd gladly delete it. I've found a way to change the default system font for Chinese characters in earlier versions of Windows (edit a registry key under 'GDI?' ), but I don't have this registry setting in Windows 7.
Has anyone else successfully set up SimSun or another font as the default font whenever typing Chinese Characters on Windows 7? Anyone else having this same problem? Here's how I fixed this error in Writer: First I adjusted language settings in OpenOffice Writer: 1) Tools -> Options -> Language Settings -> Languages. A) Check 'Enabled for Asian Languages,' B) Select 'Chinese (simplified) from the drop down. At this point, the problem was not quite fixed, I still saw a few character blobs. I went back to options and found one more important setting.