Good to know that it also happens in other PDF viewers. Thanks for letting us know.
On 26.01.2011 01:21:46 Rob Sargent wrote: > Actually, the Adobe users were fine. It was just me using Evince (on > Suse-11.2) who saw the problem and Evince doesn't have any controls in > that regard. > > On 01/24/2011 09:24 AM, Rob Sargent wrote: > > Spot on! Thanks. (One wasted weekend...) > > > > On 01/24/2011 12:53 AM, Jeremias Maerki wrote: > > > >> Not sure if I fully understand your problem, but I suspect it's once > >> more Adobe's anti-aliasing to be blamed. And this won't show up in print, > >> BTW. To get rid of this on display, go to Acrobat's Preferences Dialog, > >> select "Page Display" and enable "Enhance Thin Lines" (AR X) or disable > >> "Smooth line Art". You may have to disable "Use 2D graphics acceleration", > >> too. Nothing FOP can do at the moment. I've recently explained on this > >> list what would need to be done to work around "Adobe's problem". > >> > >> On 23.01.2011 22:34:43 Rob Sargent wrote: > >> > >> > >>> Using fop-1.0. I have a two column table. The first column spans the > >>> table. There are five rows in the table. The cells are colored. > >>> Between each row there is a thin (1pt at most, perhaps a single pixel) > >>> line. I've tried forcing colored borders over the middle ground with > >>> border-collapse="collapse" (which, if I read the compliance list > >>> correctly, is now supported). > >>> > >>> How many other ways can I a) be generating this line and b) how to get > >>> rid of them. > >>> > >>> Looking like I'll miss sending to the printers Monday :( > >>> > >>> Jeremias Maerki --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: fop-users-unsubscr...@xmlgraphics.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: fop-users-h...@xmlgraphics.apache.org