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gmphillips3 Guest
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gmphillips3 Guest
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Posted: Sun Feb 06, 2005 10:26 am Post subject: border thickness |
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| That's as thin as they get in word. Acrobat makes then thicker for some reason when you convert the word doc to pdf. |
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gmphillips3 Guest
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gshv

Joined: 01 Feb 2003 Posts: 7898 Location: Fairfax, VA USA
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Posted: Sun Feb 06, 2005 12:13 pm Post subject: |
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The document with borders looks better. Did you try to move a picture together with part description? Logically it belongs there, it may or may not look better.
Gennadiy |
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CPUShack

Joined: 16 Jun 2003 Posts: 34259 Location: State of Jefferson, USA
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gmphillips3 Guest
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Posted: Sun Feb 06, 2005 12:29 pm Post subject: re. Gennadiy |
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I had to put the part numbers and photos in tables in word to get them to line up correctly. This was a little tricky because I needed a format that would work for part number listings with and without photos.
The tables I set up in word had hidden borders that do not show up when
the docs are printed. When I converted the docs to pdfs the borders no longer show up.
Once I looked at the part number listings and photos without borders, I
decided it looked better with borders.
The photos may logically belong with the description but they also logically belong with the part number and values. Since I can't
put the photo in all three columns I decided to merge the columns
and put the photos on top of the part number, description, and value columns.
Well... It shoudn't take more than about 8 hours non-stop to go thru
the 400 docs and change the border settings on every table. Guess I better get started... |
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