![]() ![]() Settings or use the multiples of 2 up to 16 that are preset. Multiple Pages Per Sheet: This will put as many pages on a sheet as you select. In this case, since the current view is selected and is smaller than the size of the paper, it appears at 100%, and is identical to page scaling none. Shrink to Fit: When your PDF is larger than your paper If you have a 10 x 13 page, and 8.5 x 11 paper, this will also make the image smaller to fit in the printable area on the page. This can have the effect of making images much smaller than the 100% view, and can make print difficult to read. If the PDF is larger than your paper, the PDF will be scaled down to fit onto the paper. This can have the effect of enlarging your image, if it is smaller than your paper. It will keep the same proportions as the original 100% view. Here we are using the choice current view for the next few options.įit the Printable Area: This puts the page from the PDF onto the paper using as much of the paper as it can. ![]() None: This is obvious- you are keeping the image at the size it appears at 100%, because it fits on a paper size in your printer. Page scaling in the Adobe reader has five choices: In particular for the PDF print menu, there is an drop down box called page scaling. There are familiar print options, letting you select pages and decide how many copies you want, and then there are some additional ones. If you click on the printer icon at the upper left of the PDF, a menu will pop open. Since some PDFs have different size pages in the document, you may want to check the size of every page which doesn’t seem to have the same proportions as the first you checked. It will not stay permanently, but you can always hover the cursor over it again. You will see a number- perhaps 8.5 x 11, perhaps 4 x 10, or something else entirely. Hover over the very bottom of the left hand corner. Set the view at 100%, so the pages are the same size as when the PDF was created. The first thing to do is look at the PDF to find out the Like the chicken and the egg, sometimes it is hard to tell whether a PDF is printing in type which is just very small, or whether the paper size is forcing the PDF to be printed at a different size than the document.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |