• @[email protected]
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    5 months ago

    I feel like this will cause quality degradation, like repeatedly re-compressing a jpeg. Relevant xkcd

    Edit: though obviously for most use cases it shouldn’t matter

    • @Passerby6497
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      75 months ago

      Why would it cause degradation? You’re not recompressing anything, you’re taking the visible content and writing it to a new PDF file.

      • @[email protected]
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        -25 months ago

        You’re pushing it through one system that converts a PDF file into printer instructions, and then through another system that converts printer instructions into a PDF file. Each step probably has to make adjustments with the data it’s pushing through.

        Without looking deeply into the systems involved, I have to assume it’s not a lossless process.

        • @[email protected]
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          65 months ago

          You should maybe look a bit more into it. How do you think commercial printers or even hobbyists maintain fidelity in their images? Most images pass through multiple programs during the printing process and still maintain the quality. It’s not just copy/paste.

          • @[email protected]
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            -45 months ago

            They maintain a high quality but not lossless.

            As a trivial example, if you use the wrong paper size (like Letter instead of A4) then it might crop parts of the page or add borders or resize everything. Again I’ll admit, in 99% of cases it doesn’t matter, but it might matter if, say, an embedded picture was meant to be exactly to scale.

            • @[email protected]
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              35 months ago

              My friend, I worked in commercial printing for 2 decades. You’re still making assumptions that are wrong. There are ways to transfer files that are lossless and even ways to improve and upscale artwork. Why do you care so much about this?

        • @[email protected]
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          65 months ago

          Those printer instructions are called Postscript and they’re the basis of PDF.

          You are thinking that the printing process will rasterize the PDF and then essentially OCR/vector map it back. It’s (usually) not that complicated.

          • Diplomjodler
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            25 months ago

            Unless of course you print everything and then scan it again, like this guy probably does.

    • Diplomjodler
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      65 months ago

      That’s not how PDF works at all.

        • Diplomjodler
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          75 months ago

          You’re still wrong. the only place where it could cause quality loss if embedded bitmap images are compressed with lower quality settings (which you can adjust). PDF is a vector format, i.e. a mathematical description of what is to be rendered on screen. It was explicitly designed to be scalable, transmittable and rendered on a wide variety of devices without quality loss.

          • @[email protected]
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            -75 months ago

            No point discussing this if neither of us is going to prove it one way or the other.

            Bitmaps are actually a key part of what I was thinking about, so you agree with me there it seems. There’s also the issue of using the wrong paper size. .IIRC Windows usually defaults to Letter for printing even in places where A4 is the only common size and no one has heard of Letter, and most people don’t realise their prints are cropped/resized. This would still apply when printing to PDF.

            • Diplomjodler
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              5 months ago

              My point is that all these things can be controlled in the settings of your PDF printer driver. So it’s not completely straightforward but definitely doable.

    • Turun
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      25 months ago

      I don’t understand the “that’s no how PDFs work” criticism.

      Removing data from the original file is the whole point of the exercise! Of course unique tokens can be hidden in plain sight in images, letter spacing, etc. If we want to make sure to remove that we need to degrade the quality of the PDF so that this information is lost in said lossy conversion.