![]() Which is short of 210mm by sligthly more than 0.04%, while 210.00156mm is about 0.001% more than 210mm. Even if 595.28 is used, we have 595.28*25.4/72 = 210.00156īut, again, a surplus of less than 2µm (micrometers) doesn't seem sufficient for pushing Adobe Reader into thinking that the page “doesn't fit”. I don't think that a surplus of less than 150nm (nanometers) should trigger a size reduction of 6% “to fit”. Now \pdfpagewidth is set to 597.50787pt, which corresponds to 595.27559bp and this explains the shown value of 595.276. The only possible problem might be the page width, which is 595.276 in the former case, 595 in the latter. Page size: 595 x 842 pts (A4) (rotated 0 degrees) Producer: Mac OS X 10.9.2 Quartz PDFContext When I check a PDF exported from TextEdit, I get Title: *** If I run pdfinfo -box on a PDF file generated by pdftex, I get the following information: Creator: TeX Is there any possibility to set something in my TeX files such that the pdf files produced are "aware" that there is enough white margin and that no 94% scaling is needed? (Alternatively, I might produce page sizes 6% smaller than A4, but would consider that counterproductive and ridiculuous) Minimal (with respect to pdf content) example: \documentclass However, the fit/shrink options both cause a scale factor of 94% and one has to be careful to select the "None" option in order to obtain correct output. Since the document and paper size ar both A4, one might expect that all three options result in printout at original size, especially if there is a thick white margin and nothing interferes with technical printing problems at the paper boundary, say. When I create PDF files with pdflatex in A4 paper size and print them to my A4 printer from Adobe reader, there are several options available for "Page scaling", such as "None", "Fit to printable area", and "Shrink to printable area". I'm not sure if this is a TeX related question at all or rather a general problem with Adobe reader, or Windows, or printer drivers, or whatever else is involved.
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