



Luckily computer programmers have come up with one solution: Unicode. So, if you’re using a language that isn’t based on that alphabet, what font should you use? The programming for many fonts on American products follows the American Standard Code for Information Interchange, which is based on the Latin alphabet. This occurs when characters aren’t supported by a font’s code. How are you supposed to know what font to use for what language? Have you ever inserted a translation into your document and instead of appearing as text, you have a string of blank boxes or random English characters scattered throughout the foreign text? Writing documents that use both English and other languages can certainly be tricky.
