Donna Baker
Want to reuse information from a table in your PDF document? Until Acrobat 6 it was difficult to deal with tables in PDFs; Acrobat 6 included a Select Table tool, and Acrobat 7 takes your table manipulation capabilities to new heights. Author Donna Baker explains how to extract table information from your documents quickly and easily.
Donna Baker
Want to change the look and feel of text? You can modify properties of new text as well as text already in your PDF documents. Author Donna Baker explains how to do this quickly and easily.
Donna Baker
Need to make minor textual corrections in your PDF documents? You can tweak the text directly in Acrobat. Author Donna Baker explains how to do this quickly and easily.
Donna Baker
You can reuse individual images from a document if permission is given by the document author. In fact, it can be as simple as dragging a marquee around the desired area in a PDF document. Author Donna Baker explains how to do this quickly and easily in Acrobat.
Donna Baker
If you need to reuse content on a PDF document, but you didn't create it and you can't get a copy of the source document, you can use Acrobat's tools to select and repurpose the content. Author Donna Baker explains how to do this quickly and easily in Acrobat.
Donna Baker
A good way to create a cohesive-appearing document you have constructed from multiple source documents is to use a watermark or background. Author Donna Baker explains how to do this quickly and easily in Acrobat.
Donna Baker
Along with assigning page numbers to documents, you can add precise headers and footers to the pages. This tip from author Donna Baker provides guidelines and instructions for adding them in Acrobat.
Donna Baker
When you combine pages for a project, you end up with one document. Numbering the pages of the newly combined document helps give it a uniform feel, and is an important addition to professional PDF documents. Author Donna Baker explains how to do this quickly and easily in Acrobat.
Cari Jansen
One of the simplest ways to create a PDF file is by using the Adobe PDF printer that installs with Acrobat. This printer can be used to output files to PDF directly as if printing to a normal PostScript printer. This tip from Cari Jansen illustrates this point, using Adobe InDesign as the source application for the document printed.
Every in-office or offsite stakeholder can review a document using built-in features in Adobe Acrobat 7.0 Professional. This tip from Adobe.com explains how Adobe Acrobat 7.0 Professional allows users without access to your server can still participate in your review process.
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