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artbox
From Scribus Wiki
An EPS has only a single BoundingBox but a PDF contains a MediaBox, CropBox, BleedBox, TrimBox and
ArtBox.
Exporting PDFs
Trimbox is basically the size of your page in the final product, after all cutting operations. It's the size of
your page in scribus.
The bleedbox contains trimbox + any bleed
the mediabox contains bleedbox + any crop/bleed/etc... marks
the cropbox is mostly a viewer thing, it specified the area displayed in viewer : in Adobe Reader, the
document size displayed is normally the cropbox size.
with pdf exported by scribus the cropbox is equal to the mediabox
Importing PDFs
When opening a PDF, scribus requests which of these boxes content the user wish to import.
Here are a few links to pages illustrating the boxes with images.
http://www.plda.net/en/Examples/UserGuide/PageBoxes.aspx
https://acrobatusers.com/tutorials/finding-page-boundaries
For a detailed description of these boxes, see http://www.prepressure.com/pdf/basics/page-boxes , or the ISO
definition of these boxes that follow, further down in that page.
Some viewers like "gv" have an option to let you override the displayed area.
The poppler package has the capability also, for example, pdftops crops to the CropBox by default but has a -
nocrop option to use the MediaBox instead.
On Linux, you can check the values with pdfinfo in the poppler package with the -box option.
14.11.2.1 General
A PDF page may be prepared either for a finished medium, such as a sheet of paper, or as part of a prepress process
in which the content of the page is placed on an intermediate medium, such as film or an imposed reproduction
plate. In the latter case, it is important to distinguish between the intermediate page and the finished page. The
intermediate page may often include additional production-related content, such as bleeds or printer marks, that
falls outside the boundaries of the finished page. To handle such cases, a PDF page maydefine as many as five
separate boundaries to control various aspects of the imaging process:
The media box defines the boundaries of the physical medium on which the page is to be printed. It may include
any extended area surrounding the finished page for bleed, printing marks, or other such purposes. It may also
include areas close to the edges of the medium that cannot be marked because of physical limitations of the output
device. Content falling outside this boundary may safely be discarded without affecting the meaning of the PDF
file.
The crop box defines the region to which the contents of the page shall be clipped (cropped) when displayed or
printed. Unlike the other boxes, the crop box has no defined meaning in terms of physical page geometry or
intended use; it merely imposes clipping on the page contents. However, in the absence of additional information
(such as imposition instructions specified in a JDF or PJTF job ticket), the crop box determines how the page’s
contents shall be positioned on the output medium. The default value is the page’s media box.
The bleed box (PDF 1.3) defines the region to which the contents of the page shall be clipped when output in a
production environment. This may include any extra bleed area needed to accommodate the physical limitations of
cutting, folding, and trimming equipment. The actual printed page may include printing marks that fall outside the
bleed box. The default value is the page’s crop box.
The trim box (PDF 1.3) defines the intended dimensions of the finished page after trimming. It may be smaller than
the media box to allow for production-related content, such as printing instructions, cut marks, or colour bars. The
default value is the page’s crop box.
The art box (PDF 1.3) defines the extent of the page’s meaningful content (including potential white space) as
intended by the page’s creator. The default value is the page’s crop box.
The page object dictionary specifies these boundaries in the MediaBox, CropBox, BleedBox, TrimBox, and
ArtBox entries, respectively (see Table 30). All of them are rectangles expressed in default user space units. The
crop, bleed, trim, and art boxes shall not ordinarily extend beyond the boundaries of the media box. If they do, they
are effectively reduced to their intersection with the media box. Figure 86 illustrates the relationships among these
boundaries. (The crop box is not shown in the figure because it has no defined relationship with any of the other
boundaries.)