Lex:
> > I printed your web page to pdf with Firefox 3.6.18 and everything was > there. Of course things looked a little different presumably due to > fonts and sizes. Maybe its a javascript engine problem. > > Lex I used Ignore Scaling and Shrink to Fit Page Width check box on the Options tab of the Print window. I did this so that the printed page looks more like the displayed page. This overrides the % scaling selection on the Page Setup tab. This has nothing to do with the missing math issue, since I have tried this with and without this option with the same result, but your results may look more similar to mine for the "fonts and sizes" phenomenon if you use this I presume. As I mentioned I am using the standard CSS for this page. Consequently you have to be careful if this is the way you are going to print PDF versions of the displayed page because the literal text contents will run over the right-hand boundary of the literal text box unless you take this into consideration in the source text file by imposing a compatible "right-margin" for this text manually so it doesn't overrun the box on the right-hand side. Presumably a "print.css" solution would style this class of content and eliminate these types of issues. This could also work with a2x and XHTML output since it can also be styled using CSS for print purposes. I have already exhausted all my excess brain cells figuring out how to get this all to work with what has been documented so far. A follow-up adventure into CSS Land for me is uncharted territory. Any CSS experts out there? David -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "asciidoc" group. To post to this group, send email to [email protected]. To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [email protected]. For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/asciidoc?hl=en.
