With your previous LaserJet 4200, the (same?) Word document specified the Arial font, but the printed document appeared to be using the (similar) Helvetica font.
There may be some small differences between the PS fonts and the PCL fonts, due to differences in the font technologies used. PCL XL) and PostScript (a.k.a PS) on most modern LaserJet printers. The Helvetica font is one of the fonts which is usually printer-resident and available in all three traditional Page Description Languages : PCL5, PCL6 (a.k.a. Helvetica is – well as I understand – part of something called Postscript and is installed on the HP Laserjet printer Arial on screen and Arial on the printer (instead of the desired Arial on screen and Helvetica on the print-out). No, it does not differ letter forms that we see on screen are exactly the ones that get printed. Does the printed version (using the downloaded dynamically-generated soft font) differ from the screen (display) font?.
Just what font is being used in the source document?. However, when we specify Arial as the font, it doens't print Helvetica on the new printer it prints Arial as it shows on the screen.
Now that older HP Laserjet 4200 PCL 6 has been replaced by another exactly same HP Laserjet 4200 PCL 6. Helvetica is – well as I understand – part of something called Postscript and is installed on the HP Laserjet printer.
#Install helvetica font windows 7
What I am trying to say is that us users didn't need to have Helvetica installed on our Windows 7 computers. Helvetica is not, and has never been, installed on our Windows 7 computers either.
#Install helvetica font windows 10
I don't have a Windows 7 system (32-bit or 64-bit), but on my Windows 10 Professional 64-bit edition, Helvetica is not one of the standard installed fonts - so where has the copy on your workstation come from?