If you click 'options' in the save as pdf dialog box you will find the
options!
While converting a document to a graphical format (PDF) is not perfect, it
is difficult to suggest a cause for the kerning issue without a sample of
the document that caused the problem.
--
Graham Mayor - Word MVP
My web site
www.gmayor.com
Word MVP web site
http://word.mvps.org
Remisnism wrote:
Graham,
I appreciate the reply. Where would one fine the ISO 19005-1
compliance option?
Also, our application is for generating insurance contracts and we
create the documents in Word and save all of the word documents as 1
PDF file. We do the document packaging for our customers. Our
customer's are complaining about the kerning between some characters.
What is strange is that it only occurs on some of the documents, not
all.
Another question: Why is the printed PDF file (used Word to save as
PDF) slightly different than printed Word docx file?
"Graham Mayor" wrote:
I have been unable to reproduce your problem using Arial 10 in a
table. Ensure you have the ISO 19005-1 compliance option checked?
Does it really make any difference to the legality of a document that
certain letters are closer together or farther apart, when a
handwritten document is perfectly acceptable?
--
Graham Mayor - Word MVP
My web site www.gmayor.com
Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org
Remisnism wrote:
I am converting a Word 2007 docx file into a PDF using a program.
However, when I manually start the program, the output is identical
to the "Save As" pdf output provided by Word.
The output on some docx files has kerning issues where the letter
"v" is very close to the next letter. I've also noticed differences
when using the "Save As" pdf option, the output PDF file does not
exactly match the docx file. The font I'm using is Arial 10. Also
noticed that the kerning issue seems to appear on text within a
Word table.
Any ideas on how to correct this issue would be greatly appreciated
as the documents are legal documents.
Thanks.