robertfromscarborough wrote:
I've attached the original file. This file has never been opened in preview AFAIK it's straight from AutoCAD Revit.
Thank you.
I can now reproduce this bug and confirm that it is definitely a bug in Ventura. The trick is that the PDF has to be rotated. Apple seems to be applying the rotation transformation incorrectly and applying it to the text field while typing. As soon as you finish typing, it will right itself.
And I found another bug too. If you re-open a PDF that already has an annotation, there will be a phantom annotation if you try to move your annotation object. It will go away if you close the document and reopen.
Other users have also found a more serious bug in the redaction feature. I can't seem to reproduce that bug in 13.1, so maybe it has already been fixed.
You can post a general complaint about Ventura, Preview, or Apple's ongoing software quality problems here: Product Feedback - Apple
If you want to get more specific, you can file an official bug report here: https://feedbackassistant.apple.com/
But to be clear, make sure your bug report is as well-written as robertfromscarborough's post. You have to be ridiculously specific. Don't assume that they will try to rotate the PDF on their own. They will not. You have to tell them PREFERABLY IN ALL CAPS. While I was able to generate PDF and reproduce the problem, you can't rely on that either. That's asking them to do more work. More work means "look at this later". You have to do it for them. Attach a PDF as part of your instructions to reproduce the problem. You can mention that you can rotate any PDF to reproduce the problem, but you must also attach. This is not an option.
If you do this, and if many other people do similarly, and if you really lucky, it might get fixed by May. Maybe. Personally, considering how few people have noticed and/or complained, I think you missed the window. You'll need to retest in macOS 14 in the fall after Preview gets re-written yet again. When you find additional bugs, as you most certainly will, DO NOT INCLUDE them. Write a new bug report for each bug. Make sure each one has instructions to reproduce, even if they are identical. Again - this is not an option. Each bug report has to have the attachment PDF, even if all 5 bug reports use the same PDF and virtually identical instructions.
Personally, I haven't the foggiest idea why people absolutely have to have the very latest version of anything Apple. This isn't new. Back when I was younger and more naive, I was a beta tester for Apple. Preview was one of my favourites. I could always find bugs in Preview. I was in grad school at the time, so I used Preview pretty heavily for PDFs of articles I had to read. But every time a new build came out, I would re-test my bugs. Each time I re-tested, I almost always found a new bug. Most of these bugs eventually got fixed before release, but it clearly wasn't a priority. And that was in the days before yearly releases.
These days, there are no more betas. It should be obvious to anyone that Ventura is beta-quality. I don't use it for my main production computer. I have it installed on my older computer that I use for testing. I have it on a VM so that I can test on this Monterey computer. I usually upgrade just before WWDC in June. By then, all bugs that are going to get fixed, have been fixed. If not, they are well-understood by then and I can more easily work around them.
Even to post those two links above requires fairly detailed knowledge of Apple bugs. I know that going to either site is going to scramble my cookies in Safari and will require that I type all this in again if I'm not careful. I have to use Safari Technology Preview to copy the links because it has a separate Apple session. And I also copy and paste my entire post just in case. Welcome to my world.