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Distorted text in Preview

Preview is opening pdf text files with distorted text. The characters are pixelated and not smoothed and the kerning is bad with uneven spaces between letters.


Some files don't even open in Preview and instead a message appears saying: "Please wait ... Your PDF viewer may not be able to display this type of document." Such documents open fine in Adobe Acrobat.


This problem only appears in my user account on the computer. I created another user and Preview functioned fine there.


I trashed all the Preview preferences but that didn't solve the problem. What is odd though is that Preview still remembered recent files and my signature. So maybe there are other preference files outside my user Library.


I've also tried reinstalling Yosemite altogether but that didn't help.


Appreciate suggestions.


iMac, OS X Yosemite (10.10.2), + Air 13, iphone 5, 6

Posted on Apr 26, 2015 9:45 AM

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Posted on Apr 30, 2015 5:17 PM

Took it to another Apple Store and the problem was quickly fixed:


"Smooth text and line art" was unchecked in Preview Preferences.


Don't know how that happened. Thanks for the replies.

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Apr 30, 2015 5:17 PM in response to numer

Took it to another Apple Store and the problem was quickly fixed:


"Smooth text and line art" was unchecked in Preview Preferences.


Don't know how that happened. Thanks for the replies.

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Apr 26, 2015 4:05 PM in response to numer

Back up all data before proceeding.

Launch the Font Book application and validate all fonts. You must select the fonts in order to validate them. See the built-in help and this support article for instructions. If Font Book finds any issues, resolve them.

Start up in safe mode to rebuild the font caches. Restart as usual and test.

Note: If FileVault is enabled in OS X 10.9 or earlier, or if a firmware password is set, or if the startup volume is a software RAID, you can’t start in safe mode. In that case, ask for instructions.

If you still have problems, then from the Font Book menu bar, select

FileRestore Standard Fonts...

You'll be prompted to confirm, and then to enter your administrator login password.

Also note that if you deactivate or remove any built-in fonts, for instance by using a third-party font manager, the system may become unstable.

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Apr 27, 2015 8:47 PM in response to numer

Please read this whole message before doing anything.

This procedure is a test, not a solution. Don’t be disappointed when you find that nothing has changed after you complete it.

Step 1

The purpose of this step is to determine whether the problem is localized to your user account.

Enable guest logins* and log in as Guest. Don't use the Safari-only “Guest User” login created by “Find My Mac.”

While logged in as Guest, you won’t have access to any of your documents or settings. Applications will behave as if you were running them for the first time. Don’t be alarmed by this behavior; it’s normal. If you need any passwords or other personal data in order to complete the test, memorize, print, or write them down before you begin.

Test while logged in as Guest. Same problem?

After testing, log out of the guest account and, in your own account, disable it if you wish. Any files you created in the guest account will be deleted automatically when you log out of it.

*Note: If you’ve activated “Find My Mac” or FileVault, then you can’t enable the Guest account. The “Guest User” login created by “Find My Mac” is not the same. Create a new account in which to test, and delete it, including its home folder, after testing.

Step 2

The purpose of this step is to determine whether the problem is caused by third-party system modifications that load automatically at startup or login, by a peripheral device, by a font conflict, or by corruption of the file system or of certain system caches.

Please take this step regardless of the results of Step 1.

Disconnect all wired peripherals except those needed for the test, and remove all aftermarket expansion cards, if applicable. Start up in safe mode and log in to the account with the problem. You must hold down the shift key twice: once when you turn on the computer, and again when you log in.

Note: If FileVault is enabled in OS X 10.9 or earlier, or if a firmware password is set, or if the startup volume is a software RAID, you can’t do this. Ask for further instructions.

Safe mode is much slower to start up and run than normal, with limited graphics performance, and some things won’t work at all, including sound output and Wi-Fi on certain models. The next normal startup may also be somewhat slow.

The login screen appears even if you usually log in automatically. You must know your login password in order to log in. If you’ve forgotten the password, you will need to reset it before you begin.

Test while in safe mode. Same problem?

After testing, restart as usual (not in safe mode) and verify that you still have the problem. Post the results of Steps 1 and 2.

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Apr 26, 2015 10:46 AM in response to numer

You've established that the issue is within your user account so reinstalling OS X had no chance of helping. Try this:

Quit Preview.app and make sure your machine is backed up.

In the Finder, press Command-Shift-G or click on the Go menu, selecting Go To Folder. In the resulting dialog sheet, type or paste


~/Library/Containers/


and click 'Go'. In the window that opens locate the folder 'com.apple.Preview'and move it onto your desktop.

Cross your fingers, Open Preview.app and hope your issue is fixed.


C.

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Apr 26, 2015 10:51 AM in response to numer

If the above doesn't work.


Go to Finder and select your user/home folder. With that Finder window as the front window, either select Finder/View/Show View options or go command - J. When the View options opens, check ’Show Library Folder’. That should make your user library folder visible in your user/home folder. Remove the following. You may not find them all. Restart and test.


Containers/com.apple.Preview


Containers/com.apple.quicklook.ui.helper


Preferences/com.apple.Preview.LSSharedFileList.plist

Preferences/com.apple.Preview.SandboxedPersistentURLs.LSSharedFileList.plist


Saved Application State/com.apple.Preview.savedState


Credit Linc Davis for this solution.

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Apr 26, 2015 4:02 PM in response to Eric Root

Thanks for both sets of suggestions. Unfortunately neither solved the problem.


By the way, "Saved Application State/com.apple.Preview.savedState" is an alias. When I tried to find the original with command-r it said it didn't exist. Perhaps it was one of the files I'd just trashed from the Preview preferences.


Interesting that after all this trashing Preview still remembers my signature (but not the recent files), so there must be somewhere else at least that setting is saved. Perhaps there is also one that relates to how fonts are supposed to be handled in pdf text files. It would have to be specific to Preview since Safari opens pdf text files without problems

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Apr 26, 2015 5:04 PM in response to Linc Davis

Thanks for the suggestion. Indeed, it seems 10% of the fonts have "minor problems". The instructions are to remove them and redownload from the original source. In order to remove them I'll assume the redownload happens automatically or the fonts are embedded in the pdf text file. In the meantime, I'm backing up as suggested.

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Apr 27, 2015 4:57 PM in response to Linc Davis

Still not resolved. Went to the Genius Bar and they are proposing erasing the hard drive, reinstalling the system software and then restoring my user folder from a backup. They think it's a system issue even though it affects only one user.


I hope I don't have to do all this to get Preview working again.


Does anyone know how Preview handles fonts and where the corruption might be. I've fixed all the problems with fonts using FontBook?


Maybe I'll keep the existing system installation instead and create a new user and copy my current user files over. Will I lose my keychain entries, etc?

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Apr 27, 2015 8:40 PM in response to Linc Davis

All pdf's.


And the contents of pdf's that have fields to fill-in don't even appear. Instead there's a message that says "Your PDF viewer may not be able to display this type of document."


All this is only in Preview. No problems if opened in Safari or Acrobat Reader.

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Distorted text in Preview

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