> From: johnxj at comcast.net
> Merci! ** C'est avec plaisir! > After exporting to PDF I opened the file in Adobe Reader. The file size > was still quite large and Reader still took several minutes to open it. > It also takes over a full minute to move to the next page. However, in > File > Properties > Fonts Adobe Reader said all the fonts were embedded. > Another issue that I don't understand is "encoding" in Adobe Reader. > For all seven fonts used in the document (when embedded) Reader says > the encoding is "custom." All of the fonts are supposedly Unicode > compliant. I don't know where the "custom" came from or if it may have > something to do with the speed issues. ** "Custom" encoding can define an unicode font. With a PS latin font you have ANSI encoding in the properties... > The real issue for me is print speed. I have far bigger and more > complex PDFs created from other programs that display and print just > fine. At this point I am not getting decent print speed out of PDFs > from Scribus whether I export from Scribus or print to CUPS-PDF or > print to PS. > > Any enlightenment or suggestions would be welcome. ** Several options can be use for PS and (or) PDF with Ghostview. - That said, about convertions, some programs make embedding of fonts in each page, before make one file... Maybe explain the hug file generated... Junicode, especialy regular one, take a large place when embedded. Maybe find the Postscript font version of junicode, called junius, covering only standart latin encoding. Best Hirwen _________________________________________________________________ T?l?phonez gratuitement ? tous vos proches avec Windows Live Messenger? !? T?l?chargez-le maintenant ! http://www.windowslive.fr/messenger/1.asp -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.scribus.info/pipermail/scribus/attachments/20090616/44609b62/attachment.htm>
