Gary Turner <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > Not sure that's the only cause. Documents created by LaTeX and > converted to PDF have the same problem.
True, but the problem with (naively created) TeX documents is that dvips traditionally puts bitmapped fonts into its ps files (as PS Type 3 fonts). That causes a double problem, as Acroread can't display Type 3 fonts as well as Type 1, and it certainly doesn't like bitmaps. (This shouldn't be a problem nowadays, since Type 1 versions of the Computer Modern fonts have been included with TeX distributions for a while.) In the sample PS file given here, it looks like the fonts were converted from TTF to PS type 3 fonts, _before_ it's ever been touched by ghostscript. If that's the case, there's nothing GS could do to make it better. There is a problem in older versions of ghostscript (GS < 6.0) where any included PS Type 1 font was converted into a Type 3 font in the PDF. But that's not the problem here. -- Alan Shutko <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> - In a variety of flavors! Final Frontier...these are the voyages... -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]