Lachrymal, Where are you getting that from. Let me keep this simple because there can be so many variables in modern printing, some you can control and some you can't. Unless you are designing your own PCB's where you can decide how to orient the components, there are always going to be difficult pads to print especially if you are printing fine pitch. If you go back to old school printing the statement would be backwards, but the reality is that with modern component packages sometimes starving the aperture yields a better printing result; for example you may reduce bridging by going the short way. A properly set up printing profile, a good quality well managed solder paste, good squeegees, a quality stencil with appropriate aperture design and what most people forget, proper clamping and board support for the PCB, will give you the results you need.
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