Find image items, but only areas with non-white content
Posted: Fri Apr 21, 2023 4:51 pm
I have an Action and Preflight that find images (and other items) that exceed page boundaries. The issue is, for images, it returns positive results when the entire image bounds cross that boundary, even when that image content is knockout white. What I'm looking for is a flag that will return negative when it finds image content but that image is <1% of any ink.
I've poured through the Actions list, and all of the steps in creating them in the manual, and all my trial and error I cannot come up with a check for an object limited to non-white content.
My issue is I cannot have live matter cross page margins and need to check for it, but my check keeps returning images with white space.
And I'm aware I can use the Action to Crop White Border Pixels. (I can also endeavor to have designers crop their images properly.) But I have an extensive volume of backlist I'm checking (thousands of titles) and I need this process to be automated. I cannot individually go into each PDF and start manually cropping pages to get them to pass preflight. (I would also prefer to not edit the content of these files if I don't have to, so as not to risk introducing errors.)
I've poured through the Actions list, and all of the steps in creating them in the manual, and all my trial and error I cannot come up with a check for an object limited to non-white content.
My issue is I cannot have live matter cross page margins and need to check for it, but my check keeps returning images with white space.
And I'm aware I can use the Action to Crop White Border Pixels. (I can also endeavor to have designers crop their images properly.) But I have an extensive volume of backlist I'm checking (thousands of titles) and I need this process to be automated. I cannot individually go into each PDF and start manually cropping pages to get them to pass preflight. (I would also prefer to not edit the content of these files if I don't have to, so as not to risk introducing errors.)