<Ul> <Li> Always laying out the text using a resolution higher than the user is likely to use in practice . This can result in poor quality output for lower resolution devices (although techniques such as spatial anti-aliasing may help mitigate this), but provides a fixed layout, allowing easy user visualisation . This is the method used by Adobe Acrobat . </Li> <Li> Laying out the text at the resolution of the printer on which the document will be printed . This can result in low quality on - screen output, and the layout may sometimes change if the document is printed on a different printer (although this problem occurs less frequently with higher resolution printers, as rounding errors are smaller). This is the method used by Microsoft Word . </Li> <Li> Laying out the text at the resolution of a specific printer (in most cases the default one) on which the document will be printed using the same font information and kerning . The character positions and number of characters in a line are exactly similar to the printed document . </Li> <Li> Laying out the text at the resolution for the output device to which it will be sent . This often results in changes in layout between the on - screen display and printed output, so is rarely used . It is common in web page designing tools that claim to be WYSIWYG, however . </Li> </Ul> <Li> Always laying out the text using a resolution higher than the user is likely to use in practice . This can result in poor quality output for lower resolution devices (although techniques such as spatial anti-aliasing may help mitigate this), but provides a fixed layout, allowing easy user visualisation . This is the method used by Adobe Acrobat . </Li> <Li> Laying out the text at the resolution of the printer on which the document will be printed . This can result in low quality on - screen output, and the layout may sometimes change if the document is printed on a different printer (although this problem occurs less frequently with higher resolution printers, as rounding errors are smaller). This is the method used by Microsoft Word . </Li> <Li> Laying out the text at the resolution of a specific printer (in most cases the default one) on which the document will be printed using the same font information and kerning . The character positions and number of characters in a line are exactly similar to the printed document . </Li>

Expand the term wysiwyg. why is writer called a wysiwyg program