US> You can avoid this by using the ae fonts (Layout->Document->Font->ae).
US> ae are Type 1 fonts but note, the glyphs \flq, \frq, flqq and \frqq are
US> not available with ae. You can use \flqq and \frqq anyway, when you
US> install the package 'aeguill' and insert \usepackage[ec]{aeguill} in the
On Sun, 29 Feb 2004, Uwe Stöhr wrote:
US> You can avoid this by using the ae fonts (Layout->Document->Font->ae).
US> ae are Type 1 fonts but note, the glyphs \flq, \frq, flqq and \frqq are
US> not available with ae. You can use \flqq and \frqq anyway, when you
US> install the package 'aeguill' and
I generate PDFs using pdflatex from my LyX files. I'm using cm-super;
i.e. computer modern Type 1 fonts.
My PDFs look great in Mac OS X Preview, but not-so-great in Adobe
Acrobat. The fonts are not well-aligned to the baseline in Acrobat, and
unless I magnify to 150% or 200%, the type is misa
try using the lm fonts instead of cm-super and you also
get much more smaller files.
http://www.tex.ac.uk/cgi-bin/texfaq2html?label=uselmfonts
With the lm fonts you'll have the same problem: the 'A' and the 'i' are
shown under the baseline until you set the magnification up to 150%.
There is a bu
Richard Sherman wrote:
I generate PDFs using pdflatex from my LyX files. I'm using cm-super;
i.e. computer modern Type 1 fonts.
try using the lm fonts instead of cm-super and you also
get much more smaller files.
http://www.tex.ac.uk/cgi-bin/texfaq2html?label=uselmfonts
Herbert
Dear LyX-listers,
Here is a quasi-LyX question, really more about PDFs from LaTeX:
I generate PDFs using pdflatex from my LyX files. I'm using cm-super;
i.e. computer modern Type 1 fonts.
My PDFs look great in Mac OS X Preview, but not-so-great in Adobe
Acrobat. The fonts are not well-aligne