

Minimal files, one that opens fine, one which doesn't: 455.svg 454.svg 454.pdf 455.Simple files, one that opens fine, one which doesn't inbox#4352 (closed) (requires Adobe Garamond Pro to export correctly) drawing1.svg drawing1.pdf.Minimal file from inbox#4352 (closed), test1.svg, which produces test1.pdf (display fine, can't open in Adobe reader).454.svg, which produces 454.pdf (Calibri text garbled, can't open in Adobe reader).Odd things like changing an a to a c, or changing the Calibri font to Arial sometimes fixes the rendering, and sometimes also allows Adobe Reader to open the export. Other files seem to have no problem at all. Some files don't have garbled text but still fail to open in Adobe Reader. It means that you are in control of your data and, if you wish, the code of your desktop publishing tool. Free is more than just gratis (which is just a side-effect). this even happens with files that don't appear to be garbled Free really means Free with an uppercase F.if you attempt to open the file in Adobe Reader DC, it fails reporting a random error number, one of 114 117 135.

Opening in xreader (Linux Mint 20), it appears some fonts are not embedded, or are embedded incorrectly.Some fonts don't appear to be correctly embedded or embedded at all.Seems unrelated to font, another trial did successfully export pdf with sans-serif.(optional/often unnecessary) inserting some non-ASCII characters, such as a couple "accuted" glyphs from the ISO-LATIN2 charset or cs-CZ locale.Highlight a block inside the string and make it bold.Add a text string or two (default font should be sans-serif).Some steps to try to recreate files that at least fail to open in Adobe Reader This report combines symptoms from inbox#4352 (closed) and this issue.
