Tim DeWees wrote:

I?m working in a large, complex book (3000+ pages).  One of my co-workers was 
tasked with creating some new images for the book using visio. I suggested 
converting the visio images into pdf ?images? and pulling them into the book 
that way thinking that the text within the images would be searchable. The text 
within the original pdf images is searchable. But once the entire book is 
converted to pdf, the text in the images is no longer searchable.  I understand 
that I can run OCR on the new pdf file and the text will be made searchable.  I 
was wondering though if there is something I can do in the process of 
converting the visio figures and pulling them into the frame book where the 
text would still be searchable after the frame book is converted to pdf?  I did 
some research and there seemed to be varying opinions on this, with some 
recommending third-party software.  But I was wondering what I could do to 
improve this process without using third-party software?  Thanks in advance for 
your help.  In theory, any supported vector-based graphic format (PDF, EPS, 
WMF, EMF, SVG), as opposed to a raster image format (TIFF, GIF, PNG, JPEG, etc) 
should produce searchable text because the text is rendered in the graphic as 
glyphs rather than as a pattern of pixels.

Ever since FM7 made its use reliable, I have used PDF as my graphics meta-file 
format of choice for source files of all types--Visio, Illustrator, Excel, 
PowerPoint, etc.  In all cases, the result has been fully searchable text in 
the PDF deliverables.  The only time that text in graphics is not searchable is 
when I have used a PDF that was created from a CAD or schematic capture 
application, since these tools render text as a series of vector graphics 
objects rather than as glyphs from a scalable font library.

I'd have to guess that the problem lies in how the PDFs were created from 
Visio. What version of Visio are you using? And what method are you using to 
create the PDFs? If you have some recent version of Acrobat installed (and it 
might help to know which version), there can be four different methods of 
making a PDF which use at least two completely separate mechanisms (one from 
Adobe, one from Microsoft).

-Fred Ridder



-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: 
<http://lists.frameusers.com/pipermail/framers/attachments/20130623/cbd126fc/attachment.html>

Reply via email to