User manual

Table Of Contents
7 Default separator
Allows you to set the characters used to separate ingredients in the le name recipe by
default.
RELATED LINKS
Exporting layouts as graphics les on page 465
Monochrome and color graphics processing
Dorico Elements applies different settings when you export monochrome and color graphics. The
most appropriate setting depends on your intended purpose for the graphics.
Most musical scores are monochrome, meaning they use only black ink and are normally printed
on white/near-white paper. Some educational books occasionally use colors to highlight
particular notations, for example, to identify clefs, or to color notes according to their pitch. If
you export graphics les and print them with your own printer, you can leave Color selected in
the Destination section.
However, if you export graphics les in PDF format for direct printing on a platesetter or for
further production work in a page layout program, select Mono, unless your layout actually
contains colored elements. If you select Mono, Dorico Elements uses a different color space for
the resulting PDF, ensuring that the printed image only uses black ink. If you choose Color, then
the black items in your layout are exported as rich black, that is, black produced by combining
multiple colored inks. This can cause problems in production when making color separations at
the pre-press stage.
Dorico Elements species colors using the RGB color model, rather than the CMYK color model
that is used by platesetters and other professional printing machines. If you have colored objects
in your layouts and your layouts are printed professionally, you must post-process the graphics
les that are exported from Dorico Elements in another graphics application to convert the
colors from RGB to CMYK.
RELATED LINKS
Exporting layouts as graphics les on page 465
Embedding of fonts in PDF and SVG les
How fonts are handled in PDF and SVG les mainly depends on the fonts that you use in the
project.
PDF Files
The music and text fonts, and their sub-sets, that are supplied with Dorico Elements
are embedded in PDF les during the export. If you open the PDF les on a different
computer, they look the same, even if that computer does not have the fonts installed
that are used in the document. If you use different fonts, make sure that these permit
embedding.
SVG Files
SVG (Scalable Vector Graphics) les do not embed fonts directly. Some font characters,
such as note heads, articulations, and accidentals, are converted into outlines, so that
they do not depend on the font from which they are taken. Other font characters, such
as time signature and tuplet digits, are only encoded using references to the font from
which they are taken. The latter also applies to regular text, such as staff labels, tempo
instructions, and dynamics. This means that the SVG
le looks incorrect if rendered by
a web browser on a computer that does not have the fonts installed. The appearance
of SVG les depends on the browser or the rendering software, and on the fonts that
are installed on the computer.
Print mode
Exporting layouts as graphics les
469
Dorico Elements 3.1.10