Then I can print it also with the newer Version of Adobe Acrobat X but on this conversion route I loose all taging informations and crosslinks, which I want to keep. Other compilers The other possible compiler settings are pdfLaTeX (the default), XeLaTeX and LuaLaTeX. You should then able to download the generated. Scroll right to the bottom, and click on 'Other logs and output files'. Of course, the easiest way is to print it either with DocumentViewer or the old Version of Adobe Acrobat by using a pdf printer. Click on the 'Logs and output files' button next to the Recompile button. Does anyone has an idea, how I can convert my pdf to a file which can be printed also on recent versions of Adobe Acrobat. I hope the description is precise enough. ![]() I created the pictures which have issues by using:ģ) Saving image and text as eps file with the option to save text as textĤ) Using includegrapics and psfrag in LaTeX to replace the text in the final pdf However, it is the first time I used this printing toolbox, so maybe I have done something wrong. I tried different flattening tools etc in the preflight tool box, but sometimes the pictures becomes flury (looks like if the ink of the printer would be empty), sometimes it vanishes completely after printing with Adobe PDF printer. I have used Adobe PDF as printer for testing, and also tried printing on several other printers. On my new Windows computer (Windows 7) with Adobe Acrobat X the document does not print correctly. On an other old computer I have installed Adobe 8 Professional, which prints the PDF also fine. The document contains some pictures which are not printing correctly on my Linux system with Adobe Reader and Okular but they print correctly with DocumentViewer. I have created a pdf document with LaTeX (not with pdfLaTeX, but over DVI PS PDF, using ghostscript as converter on a Linux system). But Sumatra in not so bad.I have following problem. I had to use SumatraPDF because for some reason Adobe Reader 11 was giving the error Unable to find the file. TexLet g:Tex_ViewRule_pdf = 'E:\Share\PortableApps\SumatraPDF-2.4\SumatraPDF.exe' Searched for g:Tex_ViewRule_ps and changed the lines under if has('win32') to look like this. " TexLet g:Tex_DefaultTargetFormat = 'dvi'Īfter this, vim-latex was able to compile my files. so I commented out most of the lines "if has('macunix') So, I searched for the g:Tex_DefaultTargetFormat variable in the file and found this line if has('macunix') Next thing that needed to be changed is telling vim-latex to use pdflatex to compile by default. So, I just replaced pdflatex with the full path TexLet g:Tex_CompileRule_pdf = 'E:\full\path\of\miktex\pdflatex -interaction=nonstopmode $*' So I searched for g:Tex_CompileRule_pdf in the file and found this line TexLet g:Tex_CompileRule_pdf = 'pdflatex -interaction=nonstopmode $*' As I said in my question, I use miktex portable so first I needed to change the compiler. The texrc file has all the variables described in the link. For my case it was C:\Program Files (x86)\Vim\vimfiles\ftplugin\latex-suite\texrc However, I couldn't find any clue to where actually configure this variables. The output *.pdf file will be in the directory which contains your source *.tex file. Just be sure that you have 'dvips' and 'ps2pdf' installed on your system. It looks like MikTex's executable is named 'latex', so you should be OK to use the above settings. ![]() Finally it will use ps2pdf to convert from *.ps to *.pdf. Then, when it converts from *.dvi to *.ps, it will use dvips. When you convert from *.tex to *.dvi, vim-latex will use the 'latex' command. Let g:Tex_CompileRule_pdf = 'ps2pdf $*.ps' Let g:Tex_CompileRule_ps = 'dvips -Ppdf -o $*.ps $*.dvi' Download your PDF file Start Conversion Popular conversions of DVI file is free tool to use, and we have 100.000 of conversions daily. Each of these rules define the program (and arguments) used to compile each output file: let g:Tex_CompileRule_dvi = 'latex -interaction=nonstopmode $*' Start converting DVI to PDF Selected format: PDF 3. The next ones you need to set are the compile rules for vim-latex. Notice that it converts the *.tex to *.dvi, then the *.dvi to *.ps, then *.ps to *.pdf. This one sets the order in which you want to export your tex file: let g:Tex_FormatDependency_pdf = 'dvi,ps,pdf' You need to set a few variables in vim to configure vim-latex.
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