Problems with PDF/X
I got a PDF document that has been exported from Indesign and now I'm trying to convert it to PDF/X in Acrobat. I tested the complaince of the document with different PDF/X versions and these are some of the error messages that I got:
- Font is not valid.
At least one embedded font is syntatically incorrect
- Glyphs missing in embedded fonts.
All fonts embedded into a PDF have to contain glyphs for all characters in the PDF. This is required by some PDF-based ISO standards such as PDFX.
- OpenType fonts used.
Text uses OpenType font. Support for OpenType fonts has been introduced in PDF 1.6 (Acrobat 7). OpenType fonts are prohibited in PDF/X-1a, PDF/X-3 and PDF/A-1 files.
- Width information for glyphs is inconsistent.
Some PDF-based ISO standards require that the glyph widths in the font
dictionary and the glyph widths in the embedded font are consistent.
- Character references .notdef glyph.
The text contains characters that are mapped to the .notdef glyph. The
.notdef glyph should not be directly referenced but is used as a placehold-
er for missing glyphs instead.
The problem lies in some math equations placed in the document. They were created with some 3rd party app, then they were exported as PDFs and then they were placed in Indesign.
Note that this document has already been used for offset printing with satisfactory results, but for some reason I decided to convert it to PDF/X (to standardize it, to make it more "tidy" and more "professional" sort to speak).
When you convert to PDF/X, some fixes are applied, which might be useful and which might prevent some problems, like: trim box/art box, trap key, compress object streams, an output intent (to display the document with it's proper colors), etc.
Thank you in advance for your help.
If there's no easy solution for my problem, is it OK if I just add an Output Intent to a non-PDF/X document (by using a 3rd party plugin)? I was also thinking about setting the document in a such way, that when someone opens it, it will display the right colors. Otherwise, they will depend on the Acrobat's color settings. I was also considering tagging each image with an ICC profile, but that can create problems (like 4-color grays), so I would like to avoid that.
