Hi,
>>"The internal PDF standard is 72 dpi."
Is it? okay. But not for CAD, also not for Scans. However.
>>"Coordinates falling between these values are rounded. As a result, a shift occurs"
As it is in CAD formats too. The PDF standard in Acad for example is 600-1200dpi (up to ~4800)
>>"PDF will never be equal to CAD."
You are right, BUT
In the rarest cases, it will. The question is: How accurate is "equal enought" - or not.
Drawed on clean integer coordinates, perfect. If not, but the precision was well selected for this plot: It's "equal enough" for me and my Jobs.
Right, you should not use the imported data to feed a machine that automatically produces a component for a weapon, machine or nuclear power plant,
but otherwise?
I beg you.
Let's say dpi300 (never saw a 72DPI, the standard for drawings in my world is 300-800dpi)
what means it is 50-100x more accurate than my Eyes will detect the difference on paper (in relevant 1:1 scale)
>>"Vector PDFs are slang for those who do not know the structure of PDFs." >>"There is no Vector"
I would actually completely disagree with that, but it wouldn't be effective here, but okay.
Whatever it is, there is a kind of precision, like decimal places for a real.
It's your fault that I bought a book for my vacation.
For others who can't imagine by words only, sample attached for 300 and 4800:
Object data with random coordinates (like in the read world, nit clean integer data),
but created For any kind of building and civil plans, much more than enough,
also if you use 600dpi or just 300, instead of a high quality PDF.