New question #202460 on qpdfview:
https://answers.launchpad.net/qpdfview/+question/202460



Hello again,


I have been following the developement of qpdfview in Linux as I use it as my 
default PDF viewer. In only a few months, this program has become a great PDF 
viewer, one of the best in Linux (perhaps Okular is more complete, but this 
program has better looks and is less resource humgry). I think it is already 
better than Evince or ePDFView. 

On the other hand, only the Adobe Acrobat version for Linux has something very 
important and useful nowadays: a browser PDF plugin; which works for the main 
browsers (Firefox, Chrome/Chromium and Opera). Certainly, given that Acrobat is 
a resource hog and definitely not the best option in Linux, one wishes another 
PDF program in Linux could have this plugin option.

In windows, all main freeware PDF viewers have browser plugins (SumatraPDF, 
Foxit, PDF-XChange, Acrobat) and it is only in Linux that we lack this option. 
Of course, Chrome has its own native plugin (which doesn't work in other 
browsers), but if we look at the other PDF programs, if we use their plugins, 
basically in the browser we see the same programs, with menus, embedded in the 
browser window.

I tested using qpdview embedded in Firefox by using the mozplugger application 
(a Mozilla plugin module) and it looks awesome (for example, Okular looked 
awful, because it has too much toolbars you can't remove)! ... of course, I had 
removed the toolbars in the default view, so it can have a more minimalistic 
look. However, given that the arrow keys doesn't work to change pages, the only 
way you can change pages is by scrolling the mouse (because the other keys have 
specific functions in the browser, so they didn't work with the viewer).

So, I would like to ask if it is possible to create a browser plugin for 
qpdfview; this is a very desirable feature and given that none of the other PDF 
viewers in Linux (with the exception of Acrobat, but most Linux users are 
reluctant to use Acrobat in Linux, and much less people willing to install 
Acrobat just to have a browser plugin) have this option, it would fill an 
important void in Linux. And this is something that might attract a lot of 
"good publicity" in Linux (for example having a note in webupd8 and other 
important blogs that feature interesting applications) and a bigger user base 
that can collaborate testing and possibly contributing to this nice project.

Thanks for your attention.

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