PDF/A vs PDF vs PDF/X: Archival and Print Standards
PDF has several substandards for different purposes. PDF/A ensures long-term archival, PDF/X targets print production, and standard PDF covers general use.
Key Takeaways
- Regular PDF files can contain virtually any content — text, images, multimedia, JavaScript, external links, and embedded files.
- PDF/A (ISO 19005) is designed for documents that must be readable decades from now.
- PDF/X (ISO 15930) targets commercial printing workflows.
- ## PDF/A: Long-Term Archival PDF/A (ISO 19005) is designed for documents that must be readable decades from now.
Gộp PDF
Kết hợp nhiều tệp PDF thành một tài liệu.
Standard PDF
Regular PDF files can contain virtually any content — text, images, multimedia, JavaScript, external links, and embedded files. This flexibility makes standard PDF ideal for general document exchange but problematic for archival or print.
PDF/A: Long-Term Archival
PDF/A (ISO 19005) is designed for documents that must be readable decades from now. It requires all fonts to be embedded, prohibits external references, bans JavaScript, and mandates ICC color profiles. Government archives and legal systems require PDF/A for permanent records.
PDF/A Conformance Levels
- PDF/A-1b: Basic conformance — visual appearance preserved.
- PDF/A-1a: Full conformance — includes logical structure and Unicode mapping.
- PDF/A-2: Adds JPEG2000, transparency, and PDF layers.
- PDF/A-3: Allows embedding any file type (like XML data).
PDF/X: Print Production
PDF/X (ISO 15930) targets commercial printing workflows. It requires CMYK or spot color spaces, mandates trim and bleed boxes, and prohibits features that could cause printing issues like transparency and RGB images.
Which Standard to Use
| Purpose | Format | Key Requirement |
|---|---|---|
| General sharing | None | |
| Government archives | PDF/A-1b or PDF/A-2b | All fonts embedded |
| Legal records | PDF/A-1a | Tagged structure |
| Commercial print | PDF/X-1a | CMYK colors only |
| High-quality print | PDF/X-4 | Supports transparency |
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