More linearization instructions

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John Whitington 2014-11-27 17:58:18 +00:00
parent 222c737646
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@ -339,7 +339,7 @@ option to the command line, in addition to any other command being used. For exa
\noindent Linearize the file \texttt{in.pdf}, writing to \texttt{out.pdf}. \noindent Linearize the file \texttt{in.pdf}, writing to \texttt{out.pdf}.
\end{framed} \end{framed}
For further help, refer to the installation instructions for your copy of \texttt{cpdf}. In extremis, you may place \texttt{cpdflin} and its resources in the current working directory, though this is not recommended. For further help, refer to the installation instructions for your copy of \texttt{cpdf}.
\section{Object Streams} \section{Object Streams}
PDF 1.5 introduced a new mechanism for storing objects to save space: object streams. by default, \texttt{cpdf} will preserve object streams in input files, creating no more. To prevent the retention of existing object streams, use \texttt{-no-preserve-objstm}: PDF 1.5 introduced a new mechanism for storing objects to save space: object streams. by default, \texttt{cpdf} will preserve object streams in input files, creating no more. To prevent the retention of existing object streams, use \texttt{-no-preserve-objstm}: