

THE PERSONALITY COLOR TEST TELLS THE TRUTH ABOUT PEOPLE.Ĭlassic personality tests based on a series of questions suffer from the social desirability bias. By linking our emotions, they reveal who we really are. Our emotion-based personality tests retrace the path of the emotion and thus expose their essence. Yet we are the fruit of our emotions, since they determine our preferences, what we are attracted to, what we choose and what we decide. When we find ourselves in the presence of symbolic objects, these objects generate emotions that make us either feel rejected or supported. Our emotion-based personality tests are the result of scientific research carried out over the course of 20 years by a team of certified clinical psychologists and mathematicians, led by Thierry Leroy, clinical psychologist and psychoanalyst. THE PERSONALITY COLOR TEST TRANSLATES YOUR EMOTIONS. It is merely posted for additional information.Why TESTCOLOR ? because emotions always tell the truth

I have no affiliation with the link above. It's really best to preflight production PDFs using Acrobat, as opposed to preflighting layout files using InDesign. Be aware though, even if you preflight in InDesign, the PDF Job Options used when exporting to a PDF can alter things. This can be helpful to determine issues before you ever get to the PDF. Note: If you are using Adobe InDesign you can preflight with InDesign. Similar to needing InDesign to create professional-level layouts, print production often needs Acrobat Pro for some professional-level tasks. If you don't have Acrobat Pro and are creating PDFs destined for commercial printing, you need Acrobat Pro. Below shows a non-compliant PDF containing RGB data on the left and a compliant PDF on the right. Once you run the compliance test, you can see easily if there is any RGB data and on what page of the PDF it is located. You can use any of the options in the green box below to simply verify compliance with PDFX standards, which requires no RGB data to be compliant. With a PDF open, choose View > Tools > Print Production > Preflight from the menu. Things should be very similar in newer versions of Acrobat. I'm using Acrobat Pro X here, merely because I prefer that version. Another way if you prefer to have the data determined without visually needing to verify anything is to use Preflight in Acrobat.
