![]() ![]() Such support does end within a number of months, though. It is absolutely not true that Adobe no longer supports Acrobat 11. PS: On behalf of Adobe, I am really sorry for the shabby treatment you got from Adobe Technical Support. All the formatting is done by Excel prior to PDF creation. The same is true is you use the non-printing (and preferred) method of PDF production, Save as Adobe PDF or even Microsoft's Save as PDF. Nothing we can do about it from the Adobe side. The dialogs and options you display are internal to Excel and are neither accessed by or even accessible to any Adobe software.īy the time any Adobe component “sees” the output, all the formatting has already been done. This affects not only printing to the Adobe PDF PostScript printer driver instance, but all printer drivers. The layout of spreadsheets when printing from Microsoft Excel is not controlled by the print driver at all! Excel factors in a number of considerations including physical page size and printable area (i.e., physical page size less the unprintable margins) as well as device resolution to determine how the output is paginated. Change the printer paper size On the Design tab, click the Page Setup Dialog Box Launcher. The drawing page size changes to fit the drawing. (I have tested this on the recently released 11.0.21 patch, and the issue remains). Automatically resize the drawing page to fit the shapes on the page On the Design tab, in the Page Setup group, click the Size button. All machines are running Windows 7 圆4 Pro or Enterprise (with latest OS and office updates), and Adobe Acrobat XI Standard 11.0.20. Since having a user bring this to my attention, I have been able to replicate it across numerous users computers. ![]() The temporary solution at this point, is to select "Fit Sheet on One Page," THEN go to custom scaling options and selecting "Adjust to." By first selecting "Fit Sheet on One Page," The value of which the document will be scaled at is filled in for the "Adjust to" value, even though the radio option will be set to "Fit to."īy changing the radio button from "Fit to," to "Adjust to" and using the percentage already supplied from when we selected auto, the document prints properly. It seems to of lost everything past the cutoff point, even though it is now scaled down. However, when that is selected, the document prints like so. Normally, users would simply choose to "Fit Sheet on One Page" when they print to PDF. The red line indicates where the cut off would take place. In the below example, We have a line of text that is wider then the page. My issue pertains to the way the page is scaled when printing to PDF via Excel. ![]()
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