The page you are viewing is part of our 160,000 page discussion forum archive. See below for PDF-related discussions spanning 1999-2008. To ask questions and get help, head to the live Planet PDF Forum.
How to search this archive. The quickest way is to use the filters on our Advanced Search page so that only archive pages are included in the results.
Topic: RE: Unmarked Content (Via Email) Conf: (P-PDF) PDF Accessibility, Msg: 134736 From:Duff_Johnson Date: 6/18/2005 05:18 AM
> I have an email adress, and I have a tag for the link, and
> when I do a Full Check, it says "1 element is not contain
> within the structure tree" and it highlights my link. So I go
> to "Find > Unmarket Content". It highlights the line under
> the email address. I click "Tag Element" and the tag is added
> to the tag tree.
> When I run my Full Check again, "1 element is not contain
> within the structure tree" and it highlights my link once
> more. So I go to "Find > Unmarket Content". It highlights
> (again) the line under the email address. I click "Tag
> Element" and the tag is added to the tag tree.
It's hard to be sure without seeing the file, but if you are hitting
'find' and then 'tag element' without first selecting an element in the
tag panel, the new link tag would appear at the very end, and therefore
outside the tag "tree".
You have to select the container tag in the tags panel that contains the
actual text of the linked item, create a 'link' tag there if there isn't
one already, then "find" then "tag element" ... and it should appear
nested under the link tag. Or you could locate the 'link objr' tag and
drag it into place so it looks like this:
(this can be pretty much anything, like a Paragraph, table
cell or list item)
I hope that helps.
Duff Johnson
Document Solutions, Inc.
http://www.document-solutions.com
Planet PDF contributing editor Nettie Hartsock spends a lot of time surfing the Web, so she is intimately familiar with this week's Ubiquitous PDF Tool: the user-driven encyclopedia site, Wikipedia. In this piece, she talks about some of Wikipedia's PDF-specific content.
Built from the ground up, the perfect desktop PDF product for business and enterprise. Nitro PDF Professional has an uncompromising feature set so you can create, combine, edit, collaborate on and...
Dedicated exclusively to Adobe Acrobat and PDF, the 2008 Adobe Acrobat and PDF Central Conference presents a unique opportunity to broaden your understanding of how PDF technologies can positively affect your business productivity.
Discover the new features of Acrobat 9 and expand your knowledge of PDF technology. Participate in various educational seminars, such as Acrobat Form Fundamentals, Acrobat Security, Creating PDF Portfolios, Scripting with the new Flash Annotation in PDF, JavaScript for Acrobat, and much more.