Forum Discussion
Norbert86
Jan 23, 2019Copper Contributor
Line thickness of SVG changes by exporting docx as PDF
Dear Community, I observed that the line thicknesses of SVG pictures in a docx document get thicker when exported to PDF. I got the impression that Office 365 (Version 1812) changes the line thic...
Zyme86
Nov 21, 2019Copper Contributor
Chuanxin LIUfor me your workaround only works to 50%. It indeed solves the problem with the broadened lines, but when making the "conversion to form" in word365 several things happen, like for example the arrows of my inkscape vector graphic also lose their heads.
Edit: So for arrows it is also needed to additionally apply "stroke to path" in inkscape on all arrows. Then that also works fine. But still a lot of other problems occur and parts of the vector graphic are missing in the final pdf, although they are visible in the word file after conversion to form.
Jason Morse
Nov 21, 2019Copper Contributor
Thanks for your reply Chuanxin LIU. Similar to Zyme86 your workaround has not been successful for me.
Converting my SVG to a shape often destroys it or changes many of the shapes to "fat" mode within Word that I cannot change to the expected pen width.
The only workaround I have found so far is generating a PDF, converting it to SVG using https://github.com/dawbarton/pdf2svg and then importing to Word. It looks as expected in Word and the resulting exported PDF.
Ridiculously complicated for a feature that I would expect to work out of the box.