d fleming said:AI has always been a problem child when importing files into sl or flexi. Pen outlines instead of actual outlines mean squat to a plotter and most "designers" that use strictly the adobe products they were taught on in school have no clue about plotting vinyl.
There is zero problem with the Adobe Illustrator application. 100% of the problem rests with the people misusing the application. Also this notion of "they were taught that in school" is a bunch of garbage. That implies everyone in the self-taught camp doesn't make goofy mistakes when using graphics applications. How do you know that someone who created a garbage-quality customer provided art file had any kind of formal graphics training?
The situation is more complicated with sign shops trying to only use dedicated sign-making "CAS" software and not compliment it with Adobe Illustrator and/or CorelDRAW. I'd much rather open a customer provided AI, EPS or PDF file within Illustrator and trouble-shoot the file myself rather than making the client bounce back and forth with their "artist" to get them to do something as simple as removing line strokes from some artwork. (Edit: added comment here) To complicate the issue more, many large companies produce their branding work using Adobe applications, and Illustrator in particular. It's not a big deal if the assets have flat fills and no added effects. But some companies do embrace those effects. And a few of those Illustrator-based effects, such as freeform gradients, are not supported by rival drawing applications and are certainly not supported by sign industry-specific CAS software.
Attila Nagy said:You won't find anything better than Flexi for vectors.
I beg to differ. We have 3 licenses of Flexi in my workplace, but they're all primarily used in sign production rather than design. Both CorelDRAW and Adobe Illustrator have far better vector drawing environments. And Illustrator is the better of those two due to its keyboard shortcuts relating to its pen tools and its zoom in/out and pan-view functions. Add plug-ins such as Astute Graphics' PathScribe, VectorScribe or InkScribe plug-ins and it gets even better still. Using Flexi is like going back in a time machine to the mid 1990's. Even back then I was shifting from using CASmate for all my design work to doing more and more in CorelDRAW and Illustrator.
Here's an even worse deficiency for "CAS" software: their outdated type engines. I don't know of any CAS apps that fully support the extended features of OpenType. Adobe Illustrator has fully supported the OpenType spec since the first version of Creative Suite in 2003. CorelDRAW added proper OpenType support with version X6 in 2012. Adobe Illustrator CC has supported OpenType Variable Fonts for its past couple or so versions. Corel added OTF Variable support with CDR 2020. Illustrator also supports the new OpenType-SVG font format.
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