Alejandro,
> > > I haven't visited the link, but have some > > experience writing PDF files from Metacard. > > Wonderful! Have you exported to pdf the full content > of a field, a card or a whole stack? Take it easy... ;-) It actually began more than 2 years ago on the MC list when I helped Monte Goulding (sp?) generating PDF files for one of his projects. I guess Monte also worked a lot on exporting data as PDF, and that he might be of some help as well (if not too busy)... As for me, it's been more than 1.5 years since the last time I tweaked some PDF in MC... AFAIR it was in a CGI script : requests sent from a form on a web page were extracting data from a database and exporting them on the fly as PDF for download. AFAIR I used "templates" (PDF files made in Illustrator) featuring keywords, and the replace cmd was used to insert accurate data in the file that was then saved as PDF. Before saving, I had to change in the trailer the number of bytes in the file, otherwise it would generate an error when opening the file, and AFAIR some versions of Acrobat Reader on some platforms even refused to open it. IMHO "exporting a card or a whome stack" as PDF is not the best way to approach the problem. I mean : we're talking of completely different languages / environments. So I guess the best is to : - decide how you want your data to be displayed in PDF - build one (or several) PDF templates - write a "PDF export" handler that picks data (field content, etc) in your stack and insert it in the PDF file - fine tune your PDF file (according to the data inserted) and save it. Probably a more general PDF library could be created, but I doubt it will cover all needs... > > For this reason, I'm interested to know if the > code of this site still works. > > <http://www.mactech.com/articles/mactech/Vol.16/16.03/DynamicPDF/> > > Maybe it does not works for me because the wrong > line endings or because it had to be written > as binary data. > > > the more closely your file follows the PDF > > format requirements, the better. > > I agree, but my experience writing > binary data is NULL... :(( > Sorry I'm too busy right now to check this code (PDF code is totally off my head right now). Nevertheless, I would suggest that you don't spend too much time debugging code made by others. You'd better write your own code, following the PDF tutorial reference. Another solution is to produce PDF files from Illustrator, and see if they work fine. Last but not least : IMHO you don't need to bother with binary data. There are actually 2 types of PDF files : compressed and uncompressed. Uncompressed files (like those produced by Illustrator) are just ASCII (and if you study them carefully you will see how close PDF is from PostScript). In all my PDF teakings with MC, I always used uncompressed format. The only drawback is that you'll have to deal with HUGE files sometimes... JB _______________________________________________ use-revolution mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://lists.runrev.com/mailman/listinfo/use-revolution
