Then after your selection, invert selection and delete. I think I did exactly the same thing 2 years ago in Publisher without this problem.(05-29-2022, 05:27 AM)sallyanne Wrote: First you need to make sure your image has an alpha channel. Most users with a licence for word will have a licence for MS-Publisher as well. PDF-Editor and inserted the QR code after creation of the. Further you have to recreate the whole content. Word will soon tell you that it does not support your paper size. However for practical reasons this is feasible only for small graphics. Howerver, the moment I saved in Word, it became visibly unsharp.įor this I think the only solution to work is the one proposed by Zerobinary99 - using a larger format and to scale down. I was able to print (PDFCreator - my prefered printer driver for HR-PDF) a QR-code (png, 1000x1000pixel, final size approx 10mm x 10mm) before saving the document in a good quality. The problem is: as soon as you store your word document word scales the image down - regardless of the options set. In my opinion any solution that tries to solve this while creating the PDF will fail. I stumbled over this problem using Word 2010. _so far the best without any more follow-up actions.Export_CreatePDF_use it then word file shows unwanted TABLE.Print_MicrosoftPrintToPDF_hyperlinks lost.SaveAs_PDF_use it then the word file shows unwanted TABLE.So, when converting to pdf, I do not want TABLE to show up anywhere on my manuscript, also, I do not it to show up after the conversion is done, therefore, if it shows up, it is referred to as "unwanted TABLE" So, what I did is cross-reference the table, insert caption name and then manually delete the letters TABLE, just leave the roman numbers I, II, etc. I am writing an IEEE paper which I want to have the links to tables, however, on the table caption, it needs to be capitalized: TABLE, but on manuscript text, it needs lowercase: table. I am using windows 10, ms word version 2008 build 13127.21064. Just for your reference and might save some time for others. I've been bothered by this for years, somehow having a PDF file that looks exactly the same as your word file, just the postfix is different, is so hard.īelow are the methods I tried and the problems with each method. Question: How can I preserve the image quality when exporting to PDF? Exporting to XPS format has the same characteristics.(After all I thought that "document resolution" means that no resampling takes place and the full resolution is used.) When I use "Printing (220ppi)" instead of "document resolution" there is no discernible difference.This points to a resampling going on when the pdf is created. The problem gets worse, when the image is further reduced within word.Until now I am just reluctant of redoing it all in LaTeX. This is a reduced problem, so please don't suggest GIMP.The option "do not compress images in file" is enabled.I tried to encode normal 96 ppi within the PNG and resize the image in word.I tried a different PDF viewer - same image quality.I tried the same thing on a diffewrent computer with Word 2013, but no luck.When I am in the save dialog and I go again to Tools > Compress Images, the selected option is reverted to "E-Mail (96 dpi)".Reality: The Image is much worse than the PNG. Then, I hit save.Įxpected: The image in the PDF (viewed in Adobe Reader) should have a similar quality as the PNG. From Tool > Compress Images (right next to the save button) I select "use document resolution". Now I click File > Save as and select PDF from the Dropdown. I can't zoom in more than 500% but at that zoom level all lines are smooth, as expected. When I paste this into a new Word document, it looks good.
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