This has long been a limitation.  I am not sure on if any progress being
made to tackle this.  Perhaps Matthias can speak to the complexities,
progress or details surrounding several know transparencies
warnings/limitations.

I find that often even though the warning is displayed, sometimes the
conversion still looks OK on the output (50-50 perhaps).

There are several things that can be done to help overcome any integrity
concerns on the output.

Within PDF2swf you can try the -s poly2bitmap or -s bitmap arguments.  I
find that the bitmap option is more reliable for fixing display issues
(ymmv), but of course you decimate any text, and in some cases increase
file size and processing time.  You can also add the -s multiply=4 the
bitmap argument to get a really crisp bitmap output further increasing size
and processing time, but gets you pretty close to the original PDF.
Automating between switching modes of regular conversion, to flatten, to
p2b and bitmap is something you would have to script out as I do not
believe PDF2SWF will switch modes when the warnings are found.

It may be easier to tackle this issue as you mentioned PDF generation
side.  My best advice and easiest to accommodate is to get a PDF in the PDF
Version 1.3 (Acrobat 4.0) spec.  This older spec was before PDF supported
live transparency and automatically flattens these types of elements,
resulting, USUALLY in a PDF file that converts without issue using the
standard conversion in PDF2SWF.  You may still on occasion hit an integrity
issue which you would still fall back on poly2bitmap or bitmap.

Depending on you receive your files...you Publisher should be able to
easily create a PDF profile to save out to 1.3.  You could also, if you
have Acrobat Pro, use the "Save as Optimize" function to re-save the PDF to
1.3 yourself.

Anyway...good luck.  As stated, transparency, often being a printer's worst
nightmare....certainly poses its own complications in the conversion to SWF
world.

JL




On Wed, Oct 24, 2012 at 3:12 PM, Andrew Sinning
<[email protected]>wrote:

> **
> We're trying to process some files and getting 3 warnings:
>
> WARNING multiply blended transparency groups not yet supported!
> WARNING overlay blended transparency groups not yet supported!
> WARNING luminosity blended transparency groups not yet supported!
>
> Any plans to add support for blended transparency?
>
> Anything we can do to the pdf to flatten it, or perhaps we need to go back
> to the publisher and have them change the way they make the pdf?
>
> Thanks.
>
>
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-- 
Jeff
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