Society & Culture2 mins ago
,pdf Files
3 Answers
I’m confused (not difficult to do).
I’ve scanned in 39 pages of invoices (nothing fancy, just ordinary documentation) and made a .pdf file. When I look at its properties it is about 22Mb in size.
I’ve just downloaded the Barclays interim finance report (similar documentation in terms of amount of text, etc; if anything more "busy"). This is 93 pages long, but only 3.2Mb. Why is my document so large (in terms of Mb) whilst being containing only about 40% of the number of pages?
I’d like to Know because I am thinking of composing a ,pdf file to send to other people via e-Mail and fear it may be too large.
Ta in anticipation. NJ
I’ve scanned in 39 pages of invoices (nothing fancy, just ordinary documentation) and made a .pdf file. When I look at its properties it is about 22Mb in size.
I’ve just downloaded the Barclays interim finance report (similar documentation in terms of amount of text, etc; if anything more "busy"). This is 93 pages long, but only 3.2Mb. Why is my document so large (in terms of Mb) whilst being containing only about 40% of the number of pages?
I’d like to Know because I am thinking of composing a ,pdf file to send to other people via e-Mail and fear it may be too large.
Ta in anticipation. NJ
Answers
Best Answer
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.PDF is very good at shrinking text and formats, much less good at shrinking images - your scans are (presumably) jpg images and they don't get squashed very much by a pdf creator.
You need to reduce the size of each scanned image - either by rescanning at a lower resolution, or using something like Picasa or Photoshop to produce smaller image files.
You need to reduce the size of each scanned image - either by rescanning at a lower resolution, or using something like Picasa or Photoshop to produce smaller image files.