You know, now that you mention it, the font in my PDF does NOT look like MS Sans Serif. So it sounds like you do not have Adobe Reader, or what I'm guessing is more likely, Adobe Reader isn't Mac-supported.Ĭan someone with Windows and/or Adobe Reader make a test PDF file out of my SVG? I was using Inkscape 0.48 on Windows 7 64-bit, and my Reader, I just updated.like yesterday.version 9.4.0. But your Inkscape screenshot shows the same (no boldening of the header in Inkscape) so it doesn't play a role in why your PDF file is displayed differently with incorrectly rendered, fatter 'M's: Note that I do not have a bold version of the font installed, hence the heading ' Traditional "Cropping"' isn't rendered bold even though formatted as bold in Inkscape. The font is installed, as can be seen in the controls bar of the text tool in Inkscape, embedded in the PDF file and used by Apple's default PDF viewer. used 'File > Save a copy as…') from Inkscape 0.48 on Mac OS X 10.5.8, I do not see the same differences (see attached screenshot). When comparing the rendering of the SVG file in Inkscape 0.48 to the PDF file I exported (i.e. So I can't answer yes to your question.īrynn wrote:(…) I specifically formatted every last paragraph in Microsoft Sans Serif (sometimes called MS Sans) 14 size (except for the titles and subtitles, which are same font, but size 18 and 16 respectively) while in Inkscape, in the SVG.Thanks for providing additional details and a sample SVG file. But compared to bolding that I specifically formatted, it's also hard to see at that zoom level. (For some reason which I don't understand, the default font in my Inkscape 0.48 is Segoe Print?)ĭruban, the bolding doesn't seem as obvious at 200 to 400%. I'm on Windows 7, and don't understand what happens during conversion to PDF, or in display of PDF in Adobe Reader. I did not use default font on purpose, I purposely tried NOT to use default. Well, all I can say at the moment, is that I specifically formatted every last paragraph in Microsoft Sans Serif (sometimes called MS Sans) 14 size (except for the titles and subtitles, which are same font, but size 18 and 16 respectively) while in Inkscape, in the SVG. You're saying that Adobe Reader might display a different font than what was formatted? Or that the conversion to PDF might code in a different font? Is this in the case of an unusual or rare font? Or is it just what always happens? I'm not sure what you mean about the info in your edit. ".screenshots from different versions?" of what? Different versions of what? Afaik, on Windows, 'Arial' is used to render the text in this case - the OS or the application can decide which of the actually installed fonts is used to render text with a generic font ('Sans', 'Serif', 'Monospace', …) 'Sans' is the default font in Inkscape 0.48. Apparently your PDF viewer decides to use a different font than Inkscape? Or are these screenshots from different versions? Comparing the screenshots it seems that in Inkscape you didn't define a specific font but used the generic 'Sans'.
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