06-19-2025, 01:40 PM
Is there a way to capture annotations from Forscore? Maybe a screen shot of Forscore pages?
Capturing Forscore Annotations?
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06-19-2025, 01:40 PM
Is there a way to capture annotations from Forscore? Maybe a screen shot of Forscore pages?
06-19-2025, 03:33 PM
I believe you can export your PDFs with annotations embedded in them from forScore: https://forscore.co/kb/sharing-scores/ (where it says "a permanently annotated PDF file").
They will then show up when you import those PDFs into MobileSheets. Mike
06-20-2025, 08:21 AM
(06-19-2025, 03:33 PM)Zubersoft Wrote: I believe you can export your PDFs with annotations embedded in them from forScore: https://forscore.co/kb/sharing-scores/ (where it says "a permanently annotated PDF file"). Thanks...it worked great! A couple other questions. - The facial gesture doesn't always seem to capture...any suggestions? - In the "stamps" is there a way to create more numbers or numbers within circles? Do I need to go into the keyboard mode and enter that way? Terry
For the first question, see my response in the other thread you created. For the second, you can add custom stamps by tapping the stamp tool icon in the annotations editor twice to show the stamps window, tap the User category, tap the + icon and then you can add any of your own custom stamps. I've attached some stamps from another user in case they are helpful for you. One thing I will say is that these are image files, which do not scale well. If a .svg file were used instead, it would scale to any size without a loss in quality, so that's generally a better approach to use.
Mike
Today, 12:36 AM
(06-21-2025, 05:11 AM)Zubersoft Wrote: For the first question, see my response in the other thread you created. For the second, you can add custom stamps by tapping the stamp tool icon in the annotations editor twice to show the stamps window, tap the User category, tap the + icon and then you can add any of your own custom stamps. I've attached some stamps from another user in case they are helpful for you. One thing I will say is that these are image files, which do not scale well. If a .svg file were used instead, it would scale to any size without a loss in quality, so that's generally a better approach to use. Thanks Mike, but what is .svg file? I'm rather a novice at that stuff. Terry
Today, 06:13 AM
It's a scalable vector graphics file that you can create in applications such as Inkscape (which is free). The drawing instructions are stored in an xml-based file, so instead of the application reading a bunch of pixel data and drawing that to the screen, it reads the drawing instructions and follows those to recreate the image that was stored in the .svg file. That is why it scales properly to any size - the drawing command instructions are just scaled instead of the lossy approach of scaling pixels in an image. I know that got a bit technical, but I'm not sure how else to explain it.
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