It means that the font natural encoding is used. This will only work if the 
internal cmap table is reorganized. iText can't do this and I don't see the 
benefit from it.

Paulo

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Jason Boehle" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Post all your questions about iText here" 
<[email protected]>
Sent: Wednesday, February 13, 2008 10:06 PM
Subject: Re: [iText-questions] font encoding: "Built-in"....how?


The original Open Office Calc file and the PDF generated from it are
both attached.  I was using OpenOffice.org 2.3.1 on Windows XP SP2.

-Jason

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of
Paulo Soares
Sent: Wednesday, February 13, 2008 3:50 PM
To: Post all your questions about iText here
Subject: Re: [iText-questions] font encoding: "Built-in"....how?

Show us the PDF.

Paulo

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Jason Boehle" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Post all your questions about iText here"
<[email protected]>
Sent: Wednesday, February 13, 2008 7:20 PM
Subject: [iText-questions] font encoding: "Built-in"....how?


When Open Office exports a PDF, it embeds the fonts, and the encoding
shown
by the Acrobat Reader Properties page says "Built-in". What does
"Built-in"
mean as an encoding, and can iText output that encoding for an embedded
font?

Jason Boehle
[EMAIL PROTECTED]


-------------------------------------------------------------------------
This SF.net email is sponsored by: Microsoft
Defy all challenges. Microsoft(R) Visual Studio 2008.
http://clk.atdmt.com/MRT/go/vse0120000070mrt/direct/01/
_______________________________________________
iText-questions mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/itext-questions
Buy the iText book: http://itext.ugent.be/itext-in-action/

Reply via email to