It's worth reading the documentation.

1) PDF is now an ISO standard.  Adobe created it but as of 2008 it is ISO.

2)  Look at the developer documentation for Mac OSX's "quartz graphic system.
Very loosely, what you do is open a contex and then send PDF drawing
comands to it.
This can be directed to the screen of a file.   The same is true of
IOS devices like
the iPad or iPod touch.  If you are a programmer you basically writte PDF to the
glass screen.





On Sun, Dec 12, 2010 at 3:33 PM, Mike S <mi...@flatsurface.com> wrote:
> At 05:48 PM 12/12/2010, Chuck Harris wrote...
>>
>> Chris Albertson wrote:
>>>
>>>  PDF is the native display format used by the Mac.
>>
>> No it isn't.  Postscript is the standard internal language.  It is also
>> the internal language of Windows, and Linux.
>
> LOL. For someone who presumes to correct others, you should know that *nix
> predates PostScript/pdf/etc. _Some_ Linux _documentation_ is in encapsulated
> Postscript (which is different than .pdf), but that is in no way a basis for
> a claim that it is "the standard internal language," which is wrong in many
> more ways than one.
>
> Chris was correct in a way, since .pdf _is_ the native metafile format for
> recent versions of the Mac OS. Of course, in Windows, it's .wmf (Windows
> Metafile Format), not .pdf.
>
> The closest to a _standard_ "internal display language" in current OSs might
> be HTML or XML. .pdf and .wmf are both proprietary, and in no way standards.
>
>
>
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-- 
=====
Chris Albertson
Redondo Beach, California

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