It could very well be that there is no mistake. I'm fairly sure that the problem goes away if you disable anti-aliasing in Acrobat Reader and that the problem doesn't occur in print. Is that so?
If that's the case, you might be asking if there's a way to avoid that effect. I don't think it's worth the effort but if the PDF renderer were extended with some smart algorithm that can combine border elements to larger combinations this effect could be avoided. On 24.10.2006 15:41:19 Dirk Bromberg wrote: > Hi, > > i've written an "generic table modell" which creates the fo code for a > table. Inline is a sample of the table as screenshot. My problem are the > borders in cell which don't have a top and bottom border, here the line > in the middle. You can see that the border is thicker than the border in > the first and last line... > > > > > The Table has border-collapse="separate" and each Cell has a: > > border-top="[EMAIL PROTECTED]" > border-bottom="[EMAIL PROTECTED]" > border-left="[EMAIL PROTECTED]" > border-right="[EMAIL PROTECTED]" > > with: "none" or "1mm solid gray" as value. > > Is there a better was to create such borders? > > What is the mistake? > > Thanks. > > Dirk Jeremias Maerki --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]