More back story: After I pasted the 900 pages into Word for auditing, we went through and color coded RED for delete and BLACK for keep. I only need what I'm trying to copy out of the doc. Almost every time I make a text / paragraph / group of paragraph selection, the entire table gets selected. So here's the challenge, I am trying to simply SELECT text and then COPY it to another document so I can get a clean document. There are many tables within the documents that I've tried to get rid of but converting Table to Text had mixed results and there are actually some tables that I need to keep. I copy and pasted it in there for a big edit of data. Here there’s a solution that apparently should obtain the same crisp black for text in Illustrator, but it did not work for me (as it probably depends also on the printer drivers).Īt any rate: now I can start to use Affinity Publisher.I have a 900+ page word doc that has data in it that was on HTML web pages. To obtain it in InDesign, as said, you just have to leave the Black swatch "as is", and the application handles it automatically when you specify in the "Options" section of the Print dialog box "RGB composite" and "Text in Black". I don’t know if it has any incidence, since it’s about continuous tone RGB pictures, but I also unchecked "Black point compensation" (see screenshot) and used rendering intent "Relative colourimetric", which is usually the default for most graphic applications. To obtain a perfectly sharp text in Affinity, for documents which need to be printed neatly just in black and white, just set it as a RGB Black (0/0/0) and print as usual. Even if one specifies a CMYK rich Black, say 40/30/30/100, the text comes out blacker but still screened and "fuzzy" around the edges. While InDesign has a "smarter" approach and lets you specify to print all the text boxes in Black in the Printer dialog box, many graphics applications (Including Illustrator) usually handle CMYK Black specified (correctly) as a 100% as a "bleak" Black, and thus they print it screened. The problem is not specific to Affinity Designer, rather it’s a problem of how printers basically handle the printing of Black text in color documents, and how Black is specified within said documents.
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December 2022
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