Zdenek Wagner wrote:
Professional Acrobat contains Prepress Tools that can verify PDF and fix quite a lot of problems. It costs money but a damaged book may cost even more. And there is also a PitStop plugin that may be useful. Many print houses have it and complain if the supplied PDF does not conform to PDF/X.
Yes, well ... I do have a licenced copy of Adobe Acrobat Pro, and it tells me that the PDF output from XeTeX is seriously PDF/X deficient ...
But I am also a realist, and if the printer (i.e., the company / the person, as well as the device) can handle the PDF and produce good output, that is all that really matters ...
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