Mac OS X Snow Leopard: The Missing Manual (Missing Manuals)

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14.6. PDF Files

Sooner or later, almost everyone with a personal computer encounters PDF (portable document format) files. Many a software manual, Read Me file, and downloadable "white paper" comes in this format. Until recently, you needed the free program called Acrobat Reader if you hoped to open or print these files. Windows users still do.

WORKAROUND WORKSHOP

Beyond Mac OS X Fax

As you'll discover pretty quickly, Mac OS X's built-in faxing feature is bare-bones, to say the least. For example, you can't design your own cover pages, and you can't open a fax you've sent to inspect it.

There are alternatives. For starters, the shareware world is a good place to shop. For example, you can try Page-Sender, Cocoa eFax, or any of the other shareware faxing programs listed at www. versiontracker .com. (Do a search for fax on the Mac OS X tab.)

PDF files, however, are one of Mac OS X's common forms of currency. In fact, you can turn any document (in any program with a Print command) into a PDF file ”a trick that once required the $250 program called Adobe Acrobat Distiller. (Maybe Apple should advertise: "Buy Acrobat for $250, get Mac OS X free ”and $120 cash back!")

But why would you want to do so? What's the big deal about PDF in Mac OS X? Consider these advantages:

  • Other people see your layout . When you distribute PDF files to other people, they see precisely the same fonts, colors, page design, and other elements that you did in your original document. And here's the kicker : They get to see all of this even if they don't have the fonts or the software you used to create the document. (Contrast with the alternative. Say you're sending somebody a Microsoft Word document. If your correspondents don't have precisely the same fonts you have, then they'll see a screwy layout. And if they don't have Word or a program that can open Word files, they'll see nothing at all.)

  • It's universal . PDF files are very common in the Macintosh, Windows, Unix/ Linux, and even Palm and PocketPC organizer worlds . When you create a PDF file, you can distribute it (by email, for example) without worrying about what kinds of computers your correspondents are using.

  • It has very high resolution . PDF files print at the maximum quality of any printer. A single PDF file prints great both on cheapo inkjets and on high-quality image-setting gear at professional print shops . (Right now you're looking at a PDF file that was printed at a publishing plant.)

  • you can search it . Although you may be tempted to think of a PDF file as something like a captured graphic of the original document, it has several key differences. Behind the scenes, its text is still text; Spotlight can find a PDF in a haystack in a matter of seconds. That's an especially handy feature when you work with electronic software manuals in PDF format.


Note: All right, that joke about a free copy of Acrobat is an exaggeration. Mac OS X alone creates screen-optimized PDF files: compact, easy-to-email files that look good onscreen but don't have high enough resolution for professional printing. For high-end purposes and more optimization for specific uses(Web, fancy press machines, and so on), you still need a program like Adobe Acrobat, Illustrator, or InDesign.

14.6.1. Opening PDF Files

There's nothing to opening up a PDF file: Just double-click it. Preview takes over from there, and opens the PDF file on your screen.

14.6.2. Creating PDF Files

Opening, schmopening ”what's really exciting in Mac OS X is the ability to create your own PDF files. The easiest way is to click the PDF pop-up button in the standard Print dialog box (Figure 14-9). When you click it, you're offered a world of interesting PDF-creation possibilities:

  • Save as PDF . Mac OS X saves your printout-to-be to the disk as a PDF document instead of printing it.

  • Save PDF as PostScript . You get a PostScript file instead of PDF. (PostScript is a format preferred by some designers and print shops. It consists of highly precise "what to draw" instructions for PostScript laser printers.)

    Figure 14-9. Tiger's new PDF button is crawling with neat ways to process a document while it's still open ” and you can add to this pop-up button's list, too. For example, you can create even more elaborate pathways for documents you want to print or convert to PDF using an Automator workflow (Section 8.3.2).

    Or, to pare down this menu, choose Edit Menu.

  • Fax PDF faxes a document instead of printing it, as described on the preceding pages.

  • Compress PDF creates a PDF that takes up less disk space at some expense of resolution (visual quality), especially in the graphics department. Ideal for emailing or viewing onscreen ”not so hot for printing.

  • Encrypt PDF lets you password-protect the resulting PDF document for added security. (Just don't forget the password; there's no back door.)

  • Mail PDF generates a PDF and then attaches it to an outgoing message in Mail.

  • Save as PDF-X creates a specialized PDF format, popular in the printing industry, that's extra compact because it contains the minimum data needed to print the document.

  • Save PDF to iPhoto creates a PDF version of the document and then exports it to iPhoto. That's not such a bad idea; iPhoto is great at managing and finding any kind of graphics documents, including PDFs.

  • Save PDF to Web receipts Folder is a great option when you've just bought something on a Web site, and the "Print this Receipt" screen is staring you in the face, but you don't really feel like wasting paper and ink on it. You get a perfectly usable PDF version, stored in your Home Documents Web Receipts folder, where you can consult or print them later if your gray-market goods never arrive .

  • Edit Menu lets you prune this very list to remove the options you never use.

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