Difference between revisions of "Quality in Word/PDF Document"

From SAP Enable Now Wiki
 
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown)
Line 4: Line 4:
  
 
==Purpose==
 
==Purpose==
This setting is used to specify the 'quality' of screenshots in generated documents, when the document is generated in Word or PDF format. Options are:
+
This setting is used to specify the 'quality' of screenshots, markers, and other images in generated documents, when the document is generated in Word or PDF format. Options are:
 
* '''RGB''': Full-color screenshots (up to 16 million colors). This is the default.
 
* '''RGB''': Full-color screenshots (up to 16 million colors). This is the default.
 
* '''Indexed color''': Screenshots will be 'downscaled' to use a limited number of unique colors (typically 256 different colors).
 
* '''Indexed color''': Screenshots will be 'downscaled' to use a limited number of unique colors (typically 256 different colors).
Line 13: Line 13:
  
 
==See Also==
 
==See Also==
* ['''Resources''' > ] '''Documentation Settings''' > ''{Document Type}'' > ''Screenshots'' category > '''[[Quality in HTML Document[[''' setting
+
* ['''Resources''' > ] '''Documentation Settings''' > ''{Document Type}'' > ''Screenshots'' category > '''[[Quality in HTML Document]]''' setting
  
 
[[Category:Setting]]
 
[[Category:Setting]]

Latest revision as of 19:09, 30 March 2021

Where to find it

  • [Resources > ] Documentation Settings > {Document Type} > Screenshots category > Quality in Word/PDF Document setting

Purpose

This setting is used to specify the 'quality' of screenshots, markers, and other images in generated documents, when the document is generated in Word or PDF format. Options are:

  • RGB: Full-color screenshots (up to 16 million colors). This is the default.
  • Indexed color: Screenshots will be 'downscaled' to use a limited number of unique colors (typically 256 different colors).
  • Grayscale: Screenshots will be included as grayscale (black and white) images only.

Use

This setting can be used to reduce the size of the documents (RGB being the largest and Grayscale being the smallest), if that is a concern.

See Also