Prepare, Preflight and Print Acrobat PDF Files
Nice title this AcrobatUsers.com blog post had, “Prepare, preflight and print” and useful information for printing Acrobat PDF files:
Here are some tips to keep in mind, should you venture to automate print preflight workflows using your own Preflight profiles:
- Study your usual workflow for good ways to lighten the load using custom profiles. It takes a few minutes to set one up, but then only a mouse click to run it in the future.
- Write a list of what you’d like to check, and the fixes you’ll need to include.
- Don’t reinvent the wheel. Rather than starting from scratch, start from an existing profile to which you can add and remove items. For a less-involved process, start with an existing check or fix to which you can add additional tasks.
- Give your profile a meaningful name. 2009_Johnston_newsletters makes a lot more sense than 20090401.J.N or something similar.
- Look for a few generic items you might not think of, but that can enhance your documents. For example, you could include Discard document structure or Optimize PDF for fast web view from the Document category in the Fixes. Neither of these examples is necessary for the most part, but both can help optimize your document for quicker distribution.
- Don’t add more to one profile than you need. It’s simple to build a number of profiles with fixes for different sorts of issues, and then apply them sequentially. You’re not as likely to get confused or forget the parameters of a profile if you confine it to a subset of your workflow, such as images or text evaluations and fixes.
Source: http://www.acrobatusers.com/tutorials/prepare-preflight-and-print
Let’s not forget, though, that checking an Acrobat PDF, although loosely called preflight, is more of a postflight process. You can better also check the native or source file, with a tool from, yes, you guessed it, Markzware such as FlightCheck Professional…


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