![]() If you want even higher resolution, regardless of paper print standards, then you can go higher but there's really no need. 400 DPI is the standard resolution for plotting so that DPI will be perfect for any output. In fact, I take use Zip Compression settings in the PDF plot driver to get maximum output when I plot shaded views. This means you still have to set your PDF plot driver to a higher resolution as well. Even though you have your DPI set to maximum in AutoCAD, this doesn't control the DPI settings when the pass-through to your PDF plotter happens. ![]() Hidden or Shaded it turns to Raster, which is where your "fuzzy" is coming from. So it looks like i have to find out why the annotations look like they look after converting.Īgain thank you for your help! I'm really surprised at the quality and swiftness of this communities response.Īlso note that when you plot Wireframe, it's plotting vector linework. It looks like its bolded or extruded to a level it's hardly readable. pdf i see now, that the lines are drawn OK (except for the compression artifact, which are gone when i use PDFCreate) so it's really not a DPI problem as I falsely assumed before.īut the number 332 (text) from the annotation is really rendered weird. My assumption that everything is wrong was triggered by the "unreadable" rendering of the annotations, which i still think is a problem, that i have to deal with. pdf was drawn wrong, because i did not zoom in enough and Adobe Acrobat has a weird way to show some lines when zoomed out. My misconception was based solely on on the assumption, that everything in my "hidden". ![]() Let me just explain that i fully understand what DPI is and how it works. This is why a screenshot image created in Windows is crystal clear but when printed is pixelated because of the native DPI. DPI should always be related to physical printing. Sure, if you have a low DPI things can be pixelated when printed, but only on raster images. PS: Let me clarify: DPI can affect quality but not in the sense you're discussing. Remember that vector uses algorithms to generate the linework so no compression is needed. Unlink DPI as "quality" in your mind and it will help you better understand why you're getting these types of outputs. Lossless vs Lossy compression types determines this.
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