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Full Discussion: Do You Own a Kindle?
The Lounge What is on Your Mind? Do You Own a Kindle? Post 302503343 by radoulov on Thursday 10th of March 2011 08:48:51 AM
Old 03-10-2011
Quote:
Originally Posted by KenJackson
Do PDF files flow and remain readable on the Kindle when you select a larger font size?
I'm not able to modify the font size of the pdf files in Kindle
(I'm new to Kindle, so there might be some option that I don't know).

So, unfortunately no reflow (like Adobe Acrobat Reader for WM, for instance),
or at least, not for now.

I can only select an area (not a text, just like when you select an area of an image to crop, for example)
and increase its size and that, of course, is no an option for me.

The text is perfectly readable after the conversion to azw (the Amazon Kindle format),
but you loose some formatting: some programming code, for example,
might be not easy to read (long SQL statements and result sets, for instance).

Some images (like diagrams) could also the difficult to read,
but the plain text is perfectly readable after the conversion
and no further modification is needed.

Last edited by radoulov; 03-10-2011 at 09:55 AM..
 

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Text::PDF::TTFont0(3pm) 				User Contributed Perl Documentation				   Text::PDF::TTFont0(3pm)

NAME
Text::PDF::TTFont0 - Inherits from PDF::Dict and represents a TrueType Type 0 font within a PDF file. DESCRIPTION
A font consists of two primary parts in a PDF file: the header and the font descriptor. Whilst two fonts may share font descriptors, they will have their own header dictionaries including encoding and widhth information. INSTANCE VARIABLES
There are no instance variables beyond the variables which directly correspond to entries in the appropriate PDF dictionaries. METHODS
Text::PDF::TTFont->new($parent, $fontfname. $pdfname) Creates a new font resource for the given fontfile. This includes the font descriptor and the font stream. The $pdfname is the name by which this font resource will be known throughout a particular PDF file. All font resources are full PDF objects. out_text($text) Returns the string to be put into a content stream for text to be output in this font. The text is assumed to be UTF8 encoded and the return string is a glyph sequence for the text. If subsetting is enabled, then all the glyphs returned are also marked for output. out_glyphs(@n) Marks the glyphs as being needed in the output font when subsetting. Returns a string to render the glyphs as specified. width($text) Returns the width of the string, assuming it to be UTF8 encoded. outobjdeep($fh, $pdf, %opts) Handles the creation of the font stream including subsetting at this point. So if you get this far, that's it for subsetting. ship_out($pdf) Ship this font out to the given $pdf file context empty Empty the font of as much as possible in order to save memory perl v5.8.8 2006-09-09 Text::PDF::TTFont0(3pm)
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