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4 minutes ago, All Media Lab said:

Is there anything I can do

 

The forum will find a lot about this problem.

Affinity Store (MSI/EXE): Affinity Suite (ADe, APh, APu) 2.4.0.2301
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Hi All Media Lab,

 

Welcome to the forums :)

 

Unfortunately there is nothing you can do to solve this issue other than remove some fonts.

 

Thanks

Callum

Please tag me using @ in your reply so I can be sure to respond ASAP.

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I know it’s not a solution but some folks have built an entire career with a couple of fonts, so it might be a good time for deleting some of them.

Best regards!

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I am just guessing but I doubt the ability to preview or change the font of a text block from the Context toolbar dropdown in (near) realtime, or almost instantly display glyphs in the Glyph Browser, would be possible without opening the installed/active fonts when the app starts up.

 

So if you typically work with a lot of fonts & like using these near realtime capabilities to improve your workflow, I suspect you will have to bite the bullet & accept the longer startup time as the price for that.

All 3 1.10.8, & all 3 V2.4.1 Mac apps; 2020 iMac 27"; 3.8GHz i7, Radeon Pro 5700, 32GB RAM; macOS 10.15.7
Affinity Photo 
1.10.8; Affinity Designer 1.108; & all 3 V2 apps for iPad; 6th Generation iPad 32 GB; Apple Pencil; iPadOS 15.7

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2 minutes ago, R C-R said:

I am just guessing but I doubt the ability to preview or change the font of a text block from the Context toolbar dropdown in (near) realtime, or almost instantly display glyphs in the Glyph Browser, would be possible without opening the installed/active fonts when the app starts up.

 

If you use a font manager as Miguel has suggested, you can load (i.e. temporarily install) a few fonts, or a few dozen fonts, as and when you need them. The Affinity apps automatically update the font cache when a change to the list of installed fonts is detected.

Alfred spacer.png
Affinity Designer/Photo/Publisher 2 for Windows • Windows 10 Home/Pro
Affinity Designer/Photo/Publisher 2 for iPad • iPadOS 17.4.1 (iPad 7th gen)

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33 minutes ago, Alfred said:

If you use a font manager as Miguel has suggested, you can load (i.e. temporarily install) a few fonts, or a few dozen fonts, as and when you need them. The Affinity apps automatically update the font cache when a change to the list of installed fonts is detected.

I was not sure if the active fonts were updated in real time on Windows like they are on Macs, so it is good to know that they are. :)

 

On Macs, you pretty much have to keep about 115 system level fonts activated at all times to avoid stability or other issues, so typically you would have at least 100+ fonts open, but that should not affect app startup times appreciably.

All 3 1.10.8, & all 3 V2.4.1 Mac apps; 2020 iMac 27"; 3.8GHz i7, Radeon Pro 5700, 32GB RAM; macOS 10.15.7
Affinity Photo 
1.10.8; Affinity Designer 1.108; & all 3 V2 apps for iPad; 6th Generation iPad 32 GB; Apple Pencil; iPadOS 15.7

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22 minutes ago, R C-R said:

I was not sure if the active fonts were updated in real time on Windows like they are on Macs, so it is good to know that they are. :)

 

I’m not sure whether the behaviour is the same on a Mac, but on Windows you have to close and reopen the current document to make the newly installed fonts available. That’s still greatly preferable to closing and reopening the entire app.

 

Quote

On Macs, you pretty much have to keep about 115 system level fonts activated at all times to avoid stability or other issues, so typically you would have at least 100+ fonts open, but that should not affect app startup times appreciably.

 

Much the same applies to Windows.

Alfred spacer.png
Affinity Designer/Photo/Publisher 2 for Windows • Windows 10 Home/Pro
Affinity Designer/Photo/Publisher 2 for iPad • iPadOS 17.4.1 (iPad 7th gen)

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2 hours ago, MEB said:

Besides removing them, you can also consider using a font manager to load/unload fonts as needed. This way you can keep a minimum number of fonts installed and have them all available when necessary.

On osx you do not need an extra-fontmanager, you can use the native fontmangaer and deactivate all fonts you do not need (or trash them, but be aware of system-fonts).

BTW you can smart-folder-like organise your fonts (serif, sans-serif, calligraphy,FX, dingsbat...) and AP will give you this "folder-structur", but unfortunately just via the sign-tab, not directly from the text-context-bar. Its a powerful feature, much better than AP just favorite-system!

OSX 12.5  / iMac Retina 27" / Radeon Pro 580X / Metall: on! --- WWG1WGA WW!

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7 minutes ago, Alfred said:

I’m not sure whether the behaviour is the same on a Mac, but on Windows you have to close and reopen the current document to make the newly installed fonts available.

That isn't necessary on Macs, at least when using Apple's font manager (Font Book). Any font you enable in Font Book immediately becomes available in the current document. Font Book will not let you disable system fonts, although it will allow you to disable user fonts (or library fonts if you have admin privileges) even if they are in use in an open document. Affinity responds to this by putting a ? in front of the font in the Context toolbar in realtime, indicating it is now a missing font.

 

On Macs, deactivated fonts remain installed so it is really more about which ones need to be open for read access at the application level, if that makes any sense.

All 3 1.10.8, & all 3 V2.4.1 Mac apps; 2020 iMac 27"; 3.8GHz i7, Radeon Pro 5700, 32GB RAM; macOS 10.15.7
Affinity Photo 
1.10.8; Affinity Designer 1.108; & all 3 V2 apps for iPad; 6th Generation iPad 32 GB; Apple Pencil; iPadOS 15.7

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I opened my font folder in Windows Explorer with a view to purging lots of surplus fonts. It gave me the option of hiding a font (as an alternative to deleting it). I hid about 60% of my fonts in the hope of shortening startup time, but I have not noticed a diminution in this.

John

Windows 10, Affinity Photo 1.10.5 Designer 1.10.5 and Publisher 1.10.5 (mainly Photo), now ex-Adobe CC

CPU: AMD A6-3670. RAM: 16 GB DDR3 @ 666MHz, Graphics: 2047MB NVIDIA GeForce GT 630

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25 minutes ago, John Rostron said:

I opened my font folder in Windows Explorer with a view to purging lots of surplus fonts. It gave me the option of hiding a font (as an alternative to deleting it). I hid about 60% of my fonts in the hope of shortening startup time, but I have not noticed a diminution in this.

John

 

I don’t think hiding fonts in Windows does anything useful beyond shortening the font dropdown list in applications which properly support the feature.

Alfred spacer.png
Affinity Designer/Photo/Publisher 2 for Windows • Windows 10 Home/Pro
Affinity Designer/Photo/Publisher 2 for iPad • iPadOS 17.4.1 (iPad 7th gen)

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2 hours ago, Alfred said:

I don’t think hiding fonts in Windows does anything useful beyond shortening the font dropdown list in applications which properly support the feature.

Does Windows have anything like the Mac's built-in ability to activate or deactivate fonts on-the-fly? If so, maybe that could be used to both reduce startup times & avoid having to close & reopen currently open documents for newly activated fonts to become available. If not, I assume at least some third party Windows font managers might, so as MEB said one of them may provide a means to do both of these things.

All 3 1.10.8, & all 3 V2.4.1 Mac apps; 2020 iMac 27"; 3.8GHz i7, Radeon Pro 5700, 32GB RAM; macOS 10.15.7
Affinity Photo 
1.10.8; Affinity Designer 1.108; & all 3 V2 apps for iPad; 6th Generation iPad 32 GB; Apple Pencil; iPadOS 15.7

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Win Font Installation and Deletion ...

Quote

To temporarily install a font, call AddFontResource or AddFontResourceEx. These functions load a font that is stored in a font-resource file. However, this is a temporary installation because after a reboot the font will not be present.

... there are a bunch of little font load/unload tools which make use of the above temporary font loading methods.

... and so on.

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Good evening, everyone,

 

For me, on Windows 10, some time ago I went from 1400 fonts installed to 488 (currently): Affinity Designer's loading time has been halved on my small configuration.
I have a font management software and I don't regret taking the time (I had several different software over the years and I didn't use them in this way, they were only used for font previewing) to organize my library.

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  • 2 months later...
  • 7 months later...

I've just reinstalled windows 10 on my laptop (Core i3, 10GB RAM, Samsung SSD) and tried loading Affinity Designer and Photo. By default Windows has 185 fonts installed and I added just 13 more.

My load times are roughly 25 seconds for Designer and 21 Seconds for Photo. I think this is slow, especially considering its a fresh Windows install. In fact, I can start up my laptop from cold in under 30 seconds, so is there something going on regarding the font handling that differs from other, quicker loading apps?

The splash screen does spend most of its time on the 'Loading Fonts...' bit, but surely I have around the bare minimum for a Windows PC?

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1 hour ago, Checkmate said:

I've just reinstalled windows 10 on my laptop (Core i3, 10GB RAM, Samsung SSD) and tried loading Affinity Designer and Photo. By default Windows has 185 fonts installed and I added just 13 more.

My load times are roughly 25 seconds for Designer and 21 Seconds for Photo. I think this is slow, especially considering its a fresh Windows install. In fact, I can start up my laptop from cold in under 30 seconds, so is there something going on regarding the font handling that differs from other, quicker loading apps?

The splash screen does spend most of its time on the 'Loading Fonts...' bit, but surely I have around the bare minimum for a Windows PC?

You should find that 1.7 (now in beta) will be much faster at loading the fonts.

-- Walt
Designer, Photo, and Publisher V1 and V2 at latest retail and beta releases
PC:
    Desktop:  Windows 11 Pro, version 23H2, 64GB memory, AMD Ryzen 9 5900 12-Core @ 3.00 GHz, NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3090 

    Laptop:  Windows 11 Pro, version 23H2, 32GB memory, Intel Core i7-10750H @ 2.60GHz, Intel UHD Graphics Comet Lake GT2 and NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3070 Laptop GPU.
iPad:  iPad Pro M1, 12.9": iPadOS 17.4.1, Apple Pencil 2, Magic Keyboard 
Mac:  2023 M2 MacBook Air 15", 16GB memory, macOS Sonoma 14.4.1

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  • 3 months later...

Ich halte die extrem langen Ladezeiten der Fonts sowohl bei Photo als auch bei Designer für ein ernstes Designproblem der Software. Photoshop CS6 stellt mir ohne erkennbare Wartezeiten alle installierten Fonts zur Verfügung, das gilt auch für andere Programme, die alle Schriftarten verwenden.
Ich erinnere mich, dass alte Windows-Versionen das selbe Problem hatten, doch Microsoft hat das sehr gut gelöst, spätestens seit XP, möglicherweise schon bei Win95, ist zu lange her. Doch das waren noch 16- oder 32-bit-Systeme, mit in Megabyte gezählten RAM, nicht mit 32 GByte.

Nur für Affinity-Programme einen Fontmanger mit dem dazugehörenden Verwaltungsaufwand einzurichten, ist keine ernstzunehmende professionelle Option.
Also wäre es höchst an der Zeit, dass die Programmierer von Affinity dafür effiziente Wege zu schaffen. Derzeit ist die Wartezeit, sowohl beim Designer als auch bei Photo unerträglich.

Eine Reduzierung der Wartezeit um 20% wäre lächerlich und ungenügend.

Google Translator:

I find the extremely long loading times of the fonts a serious design problem for the software, both for Photo and Designer. Photoshop CS6 provides me with no discernible waiting times all installed fonts, this also applies to other programs that use all fonts.
I remember that old versions of Windows had the same problem, but Microsoft did that very well, at least since XP, possibly already at Win95, is too long ago. But these were still 16- or 32-bit systems, with counted in megabytes of RAM, not 32 GB.

Setting up a fontmanger with the associated administrative overhead just for affinity programs is not a serious professional solution.
So it's high time the Affinity programmers created efficient ways to do that. Currently, the wait is unbearable, both at the designer and at Photo.

A 20% reduction in waiting time would be ridiculous and inadequate.

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