Re: [iText-questions] Acrobat and difference between actual image size and their containers

2009-02-25 Thread 1T3XT info
vijayjoseph wrote: > hi friends, > i have a image overlap problem in parsing the simple html table > using HtmlParser > both img and column text is inside the .when i parse the table the > result pdf will have overlapped image on text.i mean column text is wrapped > in to next column.

Re: [iText-questions] Acrobat and difference between actual image size and their containers

2009-02-23 Thread vijayjoseph
hi friends, i have a image overlap problem in parsing the simple html table using HtmlParser both img and column text is inside the .when i parse the table the result pdf will have overlapped image on text.i mean column text is wrapped in to next column.please help here is my html

Re: [iText-questions] Acrobat and difference between actual image size and their containers

2008-06-19 Thread Lars Eirik Rønning
Just to properly explain my situation: The images do look nice when printed. I print them using a transform=scale(0,24) to get the nice dpi when printed. I am guessing that what happens is that the PDFTranscoder does not annotate the size based on what is shown in the pdf, but rather to the element

Re: [iText-questions] Acrobat and difference between actual image size and their containers

2008-06-19 Thread Bruno Lowagie
Lars Eirik Rønning wrote: > I have images which are generated to a pdf from batik. When i open my > pdf in acrobat and click on all different image elements, the indicated > size of the element is far greater than the actual pixel data. This can happen. Out of curiosity: don't these images look

[iText-questions] Acrobat and difference between actual image size and their containers

2008-06-18 Thread Lars Eirik Rønning
Hi. I realized this may be a bit off-topic concerning I Text, but i am hoping that perhaps someone with the inside-knowledge could explain the following to me: I have images which are generated to a pdf from batik. When i open my pdf in acrobat and click on all different image elements, the indica