Privacy Policy | Imprint | Prinect Know How | Prinect Release Notes "Trapping" is a term that is widely used in the graphic arts industry. This term refers to the spreading and choking performed between two abutting colors. Trapping is used to avoid "flashes", in other words, unwanted white lines or color margins at color transitions that are the result of register errors in printing. The trapping option lets you add thin lines ("trap lines") to the margins of color transitions that cover the colors of other separations that may shine through or empty regions ("flash lines"). There is no trapping on separated input documents, i.e. the trapping parameters have no effect. Trapping can take place on the basis of vector data (graphics) or pixel data (images). It is possible to trap graphic to graphic, graphic to image and image to image. Trapping within images is not supported. "Document" group "Override Settings from Document" option Check this option if you want the trapping information that may be in the document to be overwritten by the trapping parameters set below. "Add Settings as PDF Comment" option All operations run by the "Trapping" engine are added as PDF annotations (comments) to the edited documents if you check this option. "Retrap Trapped Pages" option Activate this parameter if you want to retrap the documents with the parameters set below. "PostScript Level 2, if possible" option PostScript Level 2 does not support DeviceN color spaces correctly. This means that DeviceN color spaces are not reproduced correctly on PostScript Level 2 RIPs. If possible, traps are created without using the DeviceN color space when you enable this option. "Limits" group This group lets you specify restrictions regarding the complexity of page contents or runtime when you create trap lines. "Maximum Size of Page Content" box and "When Maximum Size is Exceeded" parameter In the automated mode (for example, during batch processing), this parameters prevent a long-running action from blocking job processing. You can set one of the following reactions if the size of the page content in a document exceeds a set data volume (MB): Cancel with error: The job is canceled and an error message issued. Continue with warning: Processing continues; an alert message displays. Ignore and continue: This condition is ignored. Processing continues irrespective of the data volume. Default: 10 MB. "Maximum Number of Objects in Page Content" box and "When Maximum Number is Exceeded" parameter This is where you can enter the maximum number of objects that a page may have. Default: 10000 objects. "Maximum Duration of Trapping" box and "When Maximum Duration is Exceeded" parameter This is where you can enter the maximum time for trapping a document. When the set time is exceeded, the reaction follows the set rule. Default: 10 minutes. Trapper behavior for very complex PDF documents PDF documents that are to be trapped may contain an extremely large number of objects that need to be trapped. One example of this is maps, which are made up of a large number of vector elements.large number of vector elements. When processing such documents, the trap engine may require several hours to complete the task and eventually enter a "timeout" state. In this state, the Prinect workflow is paused until the trapping process is canceled or resumed. To avoid such a stoppage of the workflow, you can take the following precautions: 1.In the Prepare sequence, activate all limit parameters in the "Trapping" option in the "Document" tab in the "Limits" area by setting the "Error" option in the "When maximum ... is exceeded" list boxes. Checking these limit values will check the respective print job. If one of the limit values is exceeded, the current job is canceled with an error message, but the entire Prinect workflow is not blocked. 2.If possible, we recommend to check such complex documents with the Object Editor of PDF Toolbox before processing them with the Prinect workflow. This can also be done after the document processing has been canceled with an error message. Object Editor can detect the number of elements in the document to be trapped, which would consequently cause a Trap Engine timeout. If in doubt, it may be safer to try trapping this document with PDF Toolbox. If the number of objects to be trapped is too large, only PDF Toolbox will time out, not the Prinect workflow. In this case, PDF Toolbox can be terminated manually.
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