Dov,
You wrote:
> (2) So far we haven't seen the NUMBER of fonts as the key
> variable as to what causes corruption or too large a font
> cache file. As I have indicated in early communications, my
> systems routinely run with about 1400 to 1600 active
> typefaces, all concurrently installed.
The trouble with this whole problem is that we are
most likely dealing with secondary and tertiary effects
of whatever the real problem is.
- Dov
-Original Message-
From: Jacob Schäffer [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, June 22, 2007 5:45 PM
Dov,
You wrote:
Hi Dov,
Normally I don't argue your statements, but sometimes exceptions exists and
require a tiny dialog:
You wrote:
< ... Lowering the resolution down to 300dpi only affects microspacing for line
justification. >
First, I'm not completely sure what you mean when you say "line
The trouble with this whole problem is that we are
most likely dealing with secondary and tertiary effects
of whatever the "real" problem is.
- Dov
> -Original Message-
> From: Jacob Sch?ffer [mailto:js at grafikhuset.dk]
> Sent: Friday, June 22, 2007 5:45 PM
>
> Dov,
>
> You
David,
This comes up often enough that it should be a FAQ; there are reams of
information in the archives here and in the Adobe FM User Forum (where
there's a full discussion; I think Adobe may have issued a tech note).
Near as anyone can figure, one known problem is a combination of
Windows
resolves the problem once and for all! :-)
- Dov
-Original Message-
From: Art Campbell
Sent: Thursday, June 21, 2007 7:57 AM
To: David Spreadbury
Cc: framers@lists.frameusers.com
Subject: Re: Acrobat 8/8.1 Dropping Text in PDF
David,
This comes up often enough
Jacob,
Good to hear from you.
(1) No, I wasn't referring to leading but rather the
exact positioning and amount of space between text characters
on a line of text. Obviously 72dpi is going to look very
poor. I normally recommend a setting of 600dpi for all
layout work (and then always creating
Hi Dov,
Normally I don't argue your statements, but sometimes exceptions exists and
require a tiny dialog:
You wrote:
... Lowering the resolution down to 300dpi only affects microspacing for line
justification.
First, I'm not completely sure what you mean when you say line
We are running into a similar problem since upgrading to Acrobat 8 from Acrobat
7.
We purchased the CS3 set, Illustrator, Photoshop, and Acrobat.
When we create a Postscript file from FrameMaker 7.2p158, the PDF has random
missing text. Sometimes complete pages, othertimes maybe a few
David,
This comes up often enough that it should be a FAQ; there are reams of
information in the archives here and in the Adobe FM User Forum (where
there's a full discussion; I think Adobe may have issued a tech note).
Near as anyone can figure, one known problem is a combination of
Windows and
Art,
Can you give me a link to that forum please.
Peter
Original Message
information in the archives here and in the Adobe FM User Forum (where
You can try: http://www.adobeforums.com/cgi-bin/webx/.ee6b312/ , but
that may be a dynamic link. If it doesn't work, just enter adobe.com,
click support and then user forums and select FM.
Note that the particular thread I mentioned is old; probably need to
do an archive search.
Art
On 6/21/07,
We will need to see whether the next major release of
FrameMaker resolves the problem once and for all! :-)
- Dov
> -Original Message-
> From: Art Campbell
> Sent: Thursday, June 21, 2007 7:57 AM
> To: David Spreadbury
> Cc: framers at lists.frameusers.com
> Subject: R
Jacob,
Good to hear from you.
(1) No, I wasn't referring to "leading" but rather the
exact positioning and amount of space between text characters
on a line of text. Obviously 72dpi is going to look very
poor. I normally recommend a setting of 600dpi for all
layout work (and then always creating
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