I've read the existing topics, but don't seem to see a clear answer.
1. If using CSS I set a width and height on the image tag, Prince prints the image at that size
2. If I set no width with CSS, the image is sized based on its intrinsic resolution (set when saved in Photoshop)
Here are my questions:
1. Is it this possible to override the intrinsic image resolution by applying style="prince-image-resolution: 300dpi" directly to the image tag? If so, I must be doing something wrong because I can't get prince-image-resolution to do anything at all.
2. Is prince-image-resolution supposed to override the interpreted resolution when I do have width and height defined in the style attribute/stylesheet?
Ideally, I'd like to be able to set a width and height in the style attribute/stylesheet (to set how much space it takes up on the page) and then set prince-image-resolution to set what dpi the image actually prints at. The quality of the end result would depend on what the real dimensions were relative to the size on page and the prince-image-resolution I set.
Right now it looks like I will just always have to make my images exactly the right size/dpi by default and forget about prince-image-resolution being a magic fix.
Looking forward to some clarity. Thank you!
1. If using CSS I set a width and height on the image tag, Prince prints the image at that size
2. If I set no width with CSS, the image is sized based on its intrinsic resolution (set when saved in Photoshop)
Here are my questions:
1. Is it this possible to override the intrinsic image resolution by applying style="prince-image-resolution: 300dpi" directly to the image tag? If so, I must be doing something wrong because I can't get prince-image-resolution to do anything at all.
2. Is prince-image-resolution supposed to override the interpreted resolution when I do have width and height defined in the style attribute/stylesheet?
Ideally, I'd like to be able to set a width and height in the style attribute/stylesheet (to set how much space it takes up on the page) and then set prince-image-resolution to set what dpi the image actually prints at. The quality of the end result would depend on what the real dimensions were relative to the size on page and the prince-image-resolution I set.
Right now it looks like I will just always have to make my images exactly the right size/dpi by default and forget about prince-image-resolution being a magic fix.
Looking forward to some clarity. Thank you!