I don't really remember anything about this file other than ... why do you need to edit/view it? Perhaps it's in ASCII (which would explain why it's a bunch of symbols). Try opening it in Windows Notepad where fonts are irrelevant.
cscgal
The Queen of DaniWeb
19,421 posts since Feb 2002
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Whenever I open my IO.SYS file, I can't read it. It's a bunch of symbols. I was thinking that I don't have a particular font installed from adobe but I can't figure it out.
IO.SYS isn't the file you are after, it's a binary file that's just for booting -- the filesSystem.INI and Win.INI (in the default Windows directory) are more like what you are looking for -- but even those are not quite it.
Much of the information Windows maintains about fonts is actually kept in the Windows Registry -- but you probably don't have to muck about there, either.
Do you know the name of the font you are looking for? What app uses it? Did you copy it into the Fonts directory yourself, or did some program install it? If the file was copied into the directory yourself, Windows must be "told" about it. If you open the Fonts folder by clicking its Control Panel icon, one of the menus has a selection for updating the fonts list (I'm in Linux right now -- can't give exact menu or technique). Another way to do the same thing is to use TweakUI and select the Rebuild Fonts Cache item (or similar). TweakUI can be downloaded if you don't have it; make sure you get the appropriate version for your Windows version.
TallCool1
Practically a Posting Shark
865 posts since May 2003
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I don't think bassman is looking to do anything with his fonts. Rather, when he opens the binary file IO.SYS he gets a bunch of ASCII symbols. He thought maybe the reason it wasn't in english was because it is formatted with a font he doesn't have installed. Obviously, this isn't the case.
cscgal
The Queen of DaniWeb
19,421 posts since Feb 2002
Reputation Points: 1,474
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