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I am already more than 8 hours trying to make the STHeiti Medium.ttc.zip font work on Windows.

But I can't make it work. Is anybody able to make it work on Windows?

If yes, please share the steps how to do it.

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    The reason why you don't find an "official" way to do so is that many font licenses specifically prohibit conversions of any form such as from TrueType to Type 1, Type 1 to TrueType, whatever to OTF, TTC to component TTF and such. Jul 9, 2013 at 9:12
  • Try everythingfonts.com/ttc-to-ttf . Quick and works well. Extracts all the ttf files in a ttc pack.
    – dors
    Mar 12, 2018 at 16:54

6 Answers 6

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Assuming that Windows doesn't really know how to deal with TTC files (which I honestly find strange), you can "split" the combined fonts in an easy way if you use fontforge.

The steps are:

  1. Download the file.
  2. Unzip it (e.g., unzip "STHeiti Medium.ttc.zip").
  3. Load Fontforge.
  4. Open it with Fontforge (e.g., File > Open).
  5. Fontforge will tell you that there are two fonts "packed" in this particular TTC file (at least as of 2014-01-29) and ask you to choose one.
  6. After the font is loaded (it may take a while, as this font is very large), you can ask Fontforge to generate the TTF file via the menu File > Generate Fonts....

Repeat the steps of loading 4--6 for the other font and you will have your TTFs readily usable for you.

Note that I emphasized generating instead of saving above: saving the font will create a file in Fontforge's specific SFD format, which is probably useless to you, unless you want to develop fonts with Fontforge.

If you want to have a more programmatic/automatic way of manipulating fonts, then you might be interested in my answer to a similar (but not exactly the same) question.

Addenda

Further comments: One reason why some people may be interested in performing the splitting mentioned above (or using a font converter after all) is to convert the fonts to web formats (like WOFF). That's great, but be careful to see if the license of the fonts that you are splitting/converting allows such wide redistribution.

Of course, for Free ("as in Freedom") fonts, you don't need to worry (and one of the most prominent licenses of such fonts is the OFL).

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    I got a similar problem in Ubuntu: couldn't use the "GillSans.ttc" font in LibreOffice. Solved thanks to your tip: just opened it in fontforge and generated each ttf files. I then put generated .ttf files in ~/.fonts and regenerated caches. Now can use that font in Libreoffice.
    – gerlos
    Apr 10, 2014 at 16:07
  • @gerlos, if you have not done so already, feel free to upvote my answer if it helped you. This way, I feel encouraged to write more detailed answers.
    – rbrito
    Apr 11, 2014 at 9:03
  • Good answer (upvoted). However in my case Fontforge crashed (not your fault) while generating the ttf. I posted another alternative.
    – lepe
    Nov 27, 2014 at 2:05
  • can you provide more information on generating a font? I opened my ttc and hit generate font but it isn't really doing anything. There are also a ton of options which I am not sure I need to work with? Can you provide some more details?
    – A.com
    Sep 7, 2016 at 18:39
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You can use onlinefontconverter.com site. It works fine and have plenty of output formats (afm bin cff dfont eot pfa pfb pfm ps pt3 suit svg t42 tfm ttc ttf woff). One of the advantages I saw, is that it export all the fonts contained inside the ttc at once (which is very convenient).

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This is what worked for me for extracting TTFs from .dfont and .ttc files from Mac OS X: http://transfonter.org/ttc-unpack

The resulting TTFs work fine in Windows 7.

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    It has the maximum limit for input font file.
    – Horsing
    Aug 19, 2017 at 9:39
  • onlinefontconverter.com isnt working but this can, thanks.
    – nyconing
    Nov 2, 2020 at 3:33
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If you've got a Mac the easiest way to split those would be to use DfontSplitter, available at https://peter.upfold.org.uk/projects/dfontsplitter

The Windows version they provide doesn't work with ttc files.

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http://transfonter.org/ will do the job for you. Just upload your .ttc and it will give you a folder with all the fonttypes in .ttf files.

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  • It complains the type of font now.
    – Horsing
    Aug 19, 2017 at 9:38
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You don't need any tool. Only a few clicks.

Windows 10 can handle ttc files with no problem.

You can double click the file and install it like any ttf. Then if you nead the individual ttf files you can go to C:\Windows\Fonts\Font Name and there you will findit. If you cant do this i suspect you have a corupt file.

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    Right click / install said the font file was invalid, so I have doubts. At least, if it works for you in some cases, it doesn't work in all cases. [Windows 10 here] Jul 28, 2020 at 22:56

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