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Webpage display issues Text not displaying properlyIf you see squares instead of text on webpages, or text is blurry or fuzzy, follow the steps below to try fixing the issue. Squares show up instead of text If you see squares
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instead of text, try changing the webpage's encoding. At the top google chrome error message your preferences cannot be read right of Chrome, click Menu More Tools Encoding. Select an encoding or select Auto detect. If
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you choose Auto detect, Chrome will recommend the best encoding after looking at the webpage’s content. For a faster browsing experience, turn off Auto detect after http://productforums.google.com/d/topic/chrome/4B0WtAcEMM4 you leave the webpage. Text looks fuzzy or blurry (Windows only) If text doesn’t look clear on your computer, try changing your font settings. Step 1: Use the text tuner On your computer, click the Start menu: or . In the search box, type ClearType. Click Adjust ClearType Text. In the ClearType https://support.google.com/chrome/answer/95290?hl=en Text Tuner, check the box next to "Turn on ClearType." Click Next, then complete the steps. Click Finish. Step 2: Change your Windows appearance settings If Step 1 doesn't work, try changing your Windows appearance settings. This step is most helpful for displays with high resolution. On your computer, click the Start menu: or . In the search box, type Appearance. Click "Adjust the appearance and performance of Windows." Next to "Smooth edges of screen fonts," uncheck the box. Click Apply. Open Chrome again. Related articles: Change your Chrome language or translate webpages Fix webpages that won’t open Still need help?To get help from other users and our Google experts, post your question in the Google Chrome Forum. Share this: Megan is a Google Chrome expert and the author of this help page. Help her improve this article by leaving feedback below. Was this article helpful?YesNoSubmit Webpage display issuesReport a problem or send feedback on Chro
Chrome 64-bit brought support for modern hardware and promises "fewer crashes, better performance, and security." But with such a dramatic update, some things got broken, one of which is displaying unicode characters for Asian languages. There is a bug within Chrome 64-bit Version 37.0.2062.94 that http://features.en.softonic.com/how-to-fix-chrome-64-bit-japanese-korean-unicode-text-error-1 can change font settings and remove the ability to display Japanese and Korean text. This also affected some Chinese text, but is not as widespread. The bug isn't easily reproduced on every computer, but you'll know if you have it. I have Chrome 64-bit installed on different computers and I have the display error on one install of Chrome but not the other. The major sites where people reported the problem is Facebook and popular Asian language sites. If you're chrome error experiencing this bug, the steps below should get Japanese and Korean to display again in Chrome. Auto detect encoding in Chrome Open the Chrome menu (three bars) and locate Tools. In the menu, find Encoding and make sure that Auto detect is selected. This option will automatically check to make sure the page has the right encoding. Font settings in Chrome Another place to check is in Web content and the Customize fonts menu. Open the Chrome menu (three bars) and open chrome error message the Settings menu. Web content is found by clicking on Show advanced settings. Open the menu and scroll to the bottom and make sure that Unicode (UTF-8) is selected. UTF-8 is the most common setting for websites. Disable DirectWrite If the above options didn't work or text is hit-or-miss, the best fix is to disable DirectWrite. To access this option, in the address bar type in chrome://flags. This will bring you to the experimental features within Chrome. It's recommended you don't mess with these options, but in this case, this is the best fix. Click on Enable to disable DirectWrite in Chrome. To apply changes, click the Relaunch Now button at the bottom of the tab. Chrome will relaunch with all the same tabs that were previously open. Disabling DirectWrite should solve any problems with displaying text. Now you can browse sites that contain a lot of Asian text without missing any important information. On the Chrome product forums, the development team is aware of the issue and there should be a fix coming soon, but there isn't a release date. For right now, this is the only way to have a more permanent fix for the display error for unicode text. Related Articles Chrome update brings 64-bit for Windows, offers security and speed 16 must-have apps for every teacher Stop ignoring Android app permissions Follow me on Twitter: @chrislikesrobot Topics How to Utilities Web Browsing Windows Loading comment