This specification refers to the .
: It is an OpenType-TrueType font, which means it uses a TrueType outline format but is wrapped in an OpenType container to support advanced typographic features like better scaling and cross-platform compatibility. This specification refers to the
While Version 7.00 was standard for several years, many modern systems have updated to Version 7.01 It ensures the font includes all necessary accented
: This refers to the character encoding set , specifically the Latin-1 (Western European) script. It ensures the font includes all necessary accented characters for languages like English, French, Spanish, and German. When you see a font labeled Arial Normal
Repacked for standardized distribution across enterprise environments. Why Version 7.00?
When you see a font labeled Arial Normal , it refers to the standard, non-italic, regular weight variant of the Arial family. The term "Normal" typically corresponds to a on the CSS scale (where 400 is regular, 700 is bold). However, in this context, "Version 700" creates a critical nuance.