On Sat, 2003-09-20 at 16:21, Kevin Donnelly wrote: > I've announced the Welsh version (which isn't actually in CVS yet) on our > site: > http://kyfieithu.dotmon.com/item.php?lg=en&item_id=70 > and there is also a translation there of the first part of the tutorial, > expanded a bit. > > I also provide a link to the finished PDF, but while this displays > beautifully > in KGhostscript, the shaded sidebar does not render properly in Acrobat - see > the attached png.
Which version of Acro Reader ? If it is 4.05, I highly recommend updating to 5.08. 4.05 was very buggy and had severe problems displaying colors correctly. > It does seem to come out properly in Acrobat on Windows > (although the fonts don't appear properly on that, presumably because the > version I have there is v3). Is there any known reason for this display > issue? The reason the fonts do not appear correctly is they are not embedded and Acrobat Reader uses its own multi-master fonts to substitute for the Ghostscript fonts. This will be the case on *any* version of Acro Reader on any platform, unless you have installed them so Acrobat can use them. Because the real postscript names of the Ghostscript fonts are Nimbusxxxx, the internal Times, Helvetica or Arial and Chancery are not used. Common problem and the only way to fix this is to embed the fonts. To enable local fonts like the GS fonts to be used by Acro reader, you need to make two steps - which are not in the default setup of Acro Reader: 1. open usr/bin/acroread-5.0x/acroread script which launches acroreader define PSRESOURCEPATH=<font_location>:: 2. in your home/.acroread/prefs file, there is a line /avpUseLocalFonts [/b false] set to /avpUseLocalFonts [/b true] (I leave it at false, as I want to ensure fonts are embedded correctly in PDF's. With Scribus this is not a problem, but other apps which generate PDF are not so reliable at embedding fonts.) The details are in page 11-13 of Acro Reader help. IME, it is better to leave the defaults and embed the fonts, as it ensure reliable display on any platform or version of Acro reader. Kghostscript and GS View both have access to the GS fonts, thus they display the file as intended. See the screen shot: http://www.atlantictechsolutions.com/scribusdocs/images/gsvacro1.png Hope this is clear enough and it helps. It is not a Scribus bug, but demonstrates the different was PDF readers display files. Peter
