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Old 10-04-2012, 04:14 PM
Jamal NUMAN Jamal NUMAN is offline Saving the docx file as JPG, Windows 7 64bit Saving the docx file as JPG, Office 2010 64bit
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Question Saving the docx file as JPG,

Saving the docx file as JPG,



I’m wondering if there is a way to save the docx file as JPG directly. I’m used to save the docx as pdf then the pdf as jpg. This method has its drawback: the produced jpg from the pdf is with bad quality in terms of resolution and clearance (this can be noted clearly as we zoom in)

Thank you for the help,

Best

Jamal
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Old 10-05-2012, 09:08 AM
Ulodesk Ulodesk is offline Saving the docx file as JPG, Windows 7 64bit Saving the docx file as JPG, Office 2010 64bit
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Jamal,
Jpeg, of course, turns the PDF into an pixelated image. The resolution set for the conversion will detrmine the extent to which the quality erodes at various magnifications. This may depend on the options provided by your PDF software. In a recnet Acrobat Pro version, there are various quality settings for the conversion to jpg, including up to 2400 ppi resolution.
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Old 10-05-2012, 09:25 AM
Jamal NUMAN Jamal NUMAN is offline Saving the docx file as JPG, Windows 7 64bit Saving the docx file as JPG, Office 2010 64bit
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Ulodesk View Post
Jamal,
Jpeg, of course, turns the PDF into an pixelated image. The resolution set for the conversion will detrmine the extent to which the quality erodes at various magnifications. This may depend on the options provided by your PDF software. In a recnet Acrobat Pro version, there are various quality settings for the conversion to jpg, including up to 2400 ppi resolution.
Many thanks for the answer.

Could you please elaborate more concerning the settings that gives the best quality for the JPG image obtained for the pdf file. I’m not sure if there is a way to obtain such image as if it is created by the “Photoshop”. What I’m looking for is to have this mage looks fine regarding the degree of zoom.

A screenshot is attached for the “preferences” in the Acrobat pro. But couldn’t decide the best options.
Attached Images
File Type: jpg Clip_109.jpg (77.2 KB, 10 views)
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Old 10-05-2012, 09:32 AM
Ulodesk Ulodesk is offline Saving the docx file as JPG, Windows 7 64bit Saving the docx file as JPG, Office 2010 64bit
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Best must defined by your usage and the original material. Curves and slanted lines naturally cause the major problems in conversion to square blocks (pixels), along with tonal and color gradations. However, there is a trade-off between file size and resolution. The finer (higher) the resolution, the larger the file size.

Beyond that, there are undoubtedly issues which a graphics or PDF expect would know that I don't, as far as settings are concerned, and you might try searching under those terms in fora other than this one.
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Old 10-05-2012, 09:58 AM
Jamal NUMAN Jamal NUMAN is offline Saving the docx file as JPG, Windows 7 64bit Saving the docx file as JPG, Office 2010 64bit
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Ulodesk View Post
Jamal,
Jpeg, of course, turns the PDF into an pixelated image. The resolution set for the conversion will detrmine the extent to which the quality erodes at various magnifications. This may depend on the options provided by your PDF software. In a recnet Acrobat Pro version, there are various quality settings for the conversion to jpg, including up to 2400 ppi resolution.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Ulodesk View Post
Best must defined by your usage and the original material. Curves and slanted lines naturally cause the major problems in conversion to square blocks (pixels), along with tonal and color gradations. However, there is a trade-off between file size and resolution. The finer (higher) the resolution, the larger the file size.

Beyond that, there are undoubtedly issues which a graphics or PDF expect would know that I don't, as far as settings are concerned, and you might try searching under those terms in fora other than this one.
many thanks for the prompt answer. i'll try it and see if can do it.
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Old 10-05-2012, 10:04 AM
Ulodesk Ulodesk is offline Saving the docx file as JPG, Windows 7 64bit Saving the docx file as JPG, Office 2010 64bit
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You might also try converting to PNG instead of jpg. Sometimes the file is smaller and the image quality superior, with fewer of the so-called artifacts (often, pale oultines around text or objects left by the conversion process) that jpgs can tend to have. The difference can be confusing, however; exactly why a file comes out better and/or smaller in a PNG than a jpg has stumped my colleagues and me; we can't determine why very similar files will convert quite differently between the two.
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Old 10-05-2012, 10:15 AM
Jamal NUMAN Jamal NUMAN is offline Saving the docx file as JPG, Windows 7 64bit Saving the docx file as JPG, Office 2010 64bit
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Ulodesk View Post
You might also try converting to PNG instead of jpg. Sometimes the file is smaller and the image quality superior, with fewer of the so-called artifacts (often, pale oultines around text or objects left by the conversion process) that jpgs can tend to have. The difference can be confusing, however; exactly why a file comes out better and/or smaller in a PNG than a jpg has stumped my colleagues and me; we can't determine why very similar files will convert quite differently between the two.
thanks a lot. this is very useful.

best

Jamal
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