Crash occurs consistently at 6% completion of "exporting images from current 
page".



Fonts are indeed embedded in the PDF.  Acrobat (and I use the full retail 
version, not the free reader) correctly lists the embedded fonts.  This is 
necessary as the printing facility doesn't have my fonts installed on their 
system, and won't install them from my disks (even temporarily) for the sake of 
printing (legal issues).



I'll need to do some further debugging, like split the pages up into separate 
files to see if they export individually (which messes up automatic page 
numbering), remove text styles and format all text manually (meaning splitting 
paragraphs across multiple linked text frames - ugh!), trying a newer release 
of Scribus, trying different PostScript versions for output, etc.



I don't know yet whether the l/I issue is due to Scribus styles other something 
else, since another .sla file using the same font but no text styles exports 
fine to PDF without all l's and I's changed to bold.



If I can't generate a PDF to send to a commercial printer, the .sla is 
practically useless.  If I do end up generating multple PDFs (one for each 
page) successfully, then I'll need to find some utility online for merging the 
separate PDFs back together into one document.

> Date: Fri, 2 Apr 2010 09:42:45 -0400
> From: gregp_ky at yahoo.com
> To: scribus at lists.scribus.info
> Subject: Re: [scribus] Scribus PDF Error
> 
> On 04/02/2010 09:20 AM, JLuc wrote:
> > Le 02/04/2010 15:09, Mike Sleger a ?crit :
> >> If I download a newer ("unstable") version of Scribus and open the
> >> 1.3.3.14 document in the newer version to try the export (maybe the
> >> bug has since been fixed?), will the installation replace my current
> >> 1.3.3.14, or is there a way to have multiple installed versions of
> >> Scribus on the same machine?
> >
> > yes i have multiple versions on the same machine working fine...
> > on different versions of the file.
> 
> Some caution...
> 
> On Windows, multiple versions is relatively easy, since each new version 
> gets its own directory.
> 
> On Linux, if you do a standard install (ie, binaries) you will replace 
> at best, and more likely mess up your prior installation. The way to get 
> around this in Linux is to compile at least one of the versions, so you 
> can place it in a nonstandard location.
> 
> Getting back to your problem -
> 
> This unusual appearance of I's and l's sounds like what happens when 
> fonts are not embedded.
> 
> Greg
> Greg
> 
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