Well Adobe's other software (Illustrator, InDesign, Photoshop) and even 
Microsoft's Office suite seems to find it a lot less "complex" than FrameMaker 
does....

A screen-shot in a technical manual does come from an RGB colour space. 
Likewise, a photograph taken with a digital camera is natively an RGB thing.  
If they ever gets printed on paper on colour, then CMYK inks will be used to 
print it (there are no RGB inks!)
What's supposed to happen is that they can be included in your PDF output as 
RGB items, tagged with their respective colour profiles (sRGB for a screenshot, 
or something more fancy if the camera's manufacturer supplies their own 
profile), and the PDF is output-device-independent.
So if you view the PDF on screen, the OS and display driver take account of the 
monitor's declared output capabilities, and render the RGB items appropriately;
Conversely, if you're printing the PDF on paper, the OS and printer driver 
connive between themselves to choose appropriate CYMK values to render the RGB 
items on the page.
Trying to convert to CMYK up front in FrameMaker and thus pre-empt the 
printer's capabilities is a mug's game (and vice versa if you have natively 
CMYK or Pantone material in your PDF).


From: Craig Ede [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: 22 October 2014 15:35
To: Davis, David; framers
Subject: RE: CMYK vs RGB RE: PDF query



Yes, I think color conversions are that complex.
RGB was designed for monitors allowing a broad range of additive colors in the 
form of light (i.e. lit pixels).
CMYK was designed for subtractive printing to paper offering a restricted range 
of those colors; many of the RGB colors being "out of gamut" for CMYK, meaning 
there is no formula to convert them.
Nobody serious is printing high-quality hardcopy using R, G, and B inks. And 
I'm not sure why one would want to use CMYK to print to the screen.

Craig
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