J
Jim Harkins
A day or so ago, you answered my query about letter spacing. You said:
If you are seeing the problem on your screen, it is your video driver.
If you are seeing it in print, it is your printer driver.
The correct answer, of course, is C; None of the above.
You've harped on this before, and I plead guilty - I didn't give you
all the information. Sorry, and mea culpa! The files look fin in hard
copy and on the screen in Publisher. It's when the files are uploaded
via FTP to a Web page and viewed thru a browser that the letters get
all squished together - it's in the HTML scenario . It's bad in
Internet Explorer, and worse in Netscape - I haven't checked in any
of the lesser-known browsers. So why is the normal spacing seen in the
raw Publisher files changed to 0 in HTML!!!!???
If you are seeing the problem on your screen, it is your video driver.
If you are seeing it in print, it is your printer driver.
The correct answer, of course, is C; None of the above.
You've harped on this before, and I plead guilty - I didn't give you
all the information. Sorry, and mea culpa! The files look fin in hard
copy and on the screen in Publisher. It's when the files are uploaded
via FTP to a Web page and viewed thru a browser that the letters get
all squished together - it's in the HTML scenario . It's bad in
Internet Explorer, and worse in Netscape - I haven't checked in any
of the lesser-known browsers. So why is the normal spacing seen in the
raw Publisher files changed to 0 in HTML!!!!???