![screenshot in mac os x 10.6 screenshot in mac os x 10.6](https://notebooks.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/03/Screen-shot-2011-03-10-at-11.39.27-PM.jpg)
That’s why I say that many users will never confront this symptom.Īpple will likely fix this glitch in a future update. In general, before you can be affected by this bug, you have to use one of a subset of fonts (OpenType PostScript), work with certain types of files (mainly PDFs), and use specific applications (such as Adobe Reader). I’m guessing here, but this may be a function of the specific printer.
![screenshot in mac os x 10.6 screenshot in mac os x 10.6](https://qualityssl.com/images/osx-server-10-6/large/1.png)
This happened even though the original document was not a PDF, such as when printing from Word or Pages.
#SCREENSHOT IN MAC OS X 10.6 PDF#
The problem primarily occurs with PDF files-especially PDF files you create in Mac OS X 10.6.7, such as via the “Save as PDF…” command in almost any application.
![screenshot in mac os x 10.6 screenshot in mac os x 10.6](https://www.lifewire.com/thmb/NnlCOCDhnbzhkvl7NsQA3jSWfYY=/1280x800/filters:no_upscale():max_bytes(150000):strip_icc()/001-can-i-upgrade-or-downgrade-to-os-x-snow-leopard-3f83ea1a46ab4802b988c968e7de0091.jpg)
You can find out exactly which of your fonts are OpenType PostScript by launching FontBook and entering OpenType PostScript in the Search box. You are likely to have them, however, if you’ve installed certain third-party software, especially Adobe applications. As far as I can tell, Mac OS X does not install any such PostScript fonts. The problem only occurs if you are using OpenType PostScript fonts.