tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8772794114973637176.post1030869623827905258..comments2023-10-08T00:33:05.540+09:00Comments on Feelings of Destinations: What to do when MathType equations appear raised above the baseline in Microsoft Word 2007/2010?GP Joshihttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09609359339379600256noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8772794114973637176.post-47873458248485603812017-03-24T00:22:18.638+09:002017-03-24T00:22:18.638+09:00The Design Science workaround no longer works, at ...The Design Science workaround no longer works, at least not in my document (2016).SteveLhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16536078718301848946noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8772794114973637176.post-43861554500618417372013-11-08T09:47:01.312+09:002013-11-08T09:47:01.312+09:00You mentioned the Design Science article about thi...You mentioned the <a href="http://www.dessci.com/en/support/mathtype/tsn/tsn129.htm" rel="nofollow">Design Science article about this</a>, but what you didn't mention is that this article provides a work-around that directly addresses the issue. The issue is that Word incorrectly applies a <b>Lowered</b> property to the characters that follow an equation. Our article describes a proper workaround -- that is, removing the Lowered property so the characters are at the proper level. Changing how the system deals with Asian fonts won't do that, and even if it does seem to work, it won't work for those who don't have Asian fonts installed & enabled.Bob Mathewshttp://www.dessci.comnoreply@blogger.com