RE: [iText-questions] Absolute Positioning of Text

2004-04-20 Thread iText Mailing List Account
ECTED] Subject: Re: [iText-questions] Absolute Positioning of Text Word is poor starting point for this kind of project. It's better to use Acrobat or (much cheaper) FormMax to create the template, and add AcroForm fields to it. iText can then easily fill and flatten the fields to create the

RE: [iText-questions] Absolute Positioning of Text

2004-04-20 Thread Paulo Soares
[EMAIL PROTECTED] > [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On > Behalf Of iText Mailing List Account > Sent: Monday, April 19, 2004 9:12 PM > To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Subject: [iText-questions] Absolute Positioning of Text > > Here's my situation, I've inherited this project from a

Re: [iText-questions] Absolute Positioning of Text

2004-04-19 Thread chicks
Word is poor starting point for this kind of project. It's better to use Acrobat or (much cheaper) FormMax to create the template, and add AcroForm fields to it. iText can then easily fill and flatten the fields to create the final PDF for the end user. Here's an example: http://forum.planetp

[iText-questions] Absolute Positioning of Text

2004-04-19 Thread iText Mailing List Account
Here's my situation, I've inherited this project from a previous programmer who's since left the company, so I'm stuck cleaning up the mess. I've got a form the client developed in Word, putting in a bunch of _'s to indicate where the form data was supposed to go. The want a web page that a user