OK Dove, what does bubbamisa mean??? I'm guessin' something like crap! :) I did add sort of a disclaimer that the reason I gave was questionable!
Many years ago I used to do lots of contracting mainly in Frame support and training. And a lot of the time when I used this trick is was as you said, generally the reasons documents wouldn't print was because the printer was a relic, the content of the Frame doc came from some legacy program that had weird hidden 'bits' and the graphics fell off the back of a computer somewhere. Oh the stories I could tell... tina Framer user since 1990... -----Original Message----- From: Dov Isaacs [mailto:isa...@adobe.com] Sent: Friday, 6 April 2007 1:40 AM To: Tina Poole; Gillian Flato; framers at FrameUsers.com Subject: RE: Can't print from Frame Tina, Bubbamisa! Good try, but absolutely groundless. The "optimize for portability" hack was put into the Windows driver to deal with some applications, FrameMaker NOT being among them, that injected their own PostScript into the driver's output stream improperly, interfering with the current graphics state of the PostScript job. It also makes a bit of a difference how fonts and procedure definitions (what you are calling "a shorthand version of PostScript" are put into the job, but certainly not how they are used. If in fact, use of the "optimize for portability" option causes something to print that doesn't otherwise print from FrameMaker, you are dealing with either (1) a very traif EPS file (EPS file improperly constructed, not following the rules for EPS files), (2) an otherwise terribly misconfigured printer driver or print itself or (3) a very crufty PostScript RIP / printer. - Dov > -----Original Message----- > From: Tina Poole > Sent: Monday, April 02, 2007 3:21 PM > To: Gillian Flato; framers at FrameUsers.com > Subject: RE: Can't print from Frame > > Hi Gillian > > If you look in your postscript settings on the printer > dialog there will be an option that says something like > "Optimize for speed" change this to "Optimize for portability". > Speed gives a shorthand version of postscript which confuses > some printers, while portability includes everything (this is > how it was explained to me not sure if it is correct or not > but generally fixes the crazy stack errors). > > > tina