Re: [CentOS] {SOLVED} Re: PDF Reader/Editor for CentOS 5.7 (32 bit)?

2011-09-24 Thread ken

On 09/23/2011 08:45 PM Craig White wrote:
 On Fri, 2011-09-23 at 12:47 -0500, Lanny Marcus wrote:
 On Wed, Sep 21, 2011 at 1:46 PM,  m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:
 Lanny Marcus wrote:
 On Tue, Sep 20, 2011 at 8:35 AM, Lanny Marcus lmmailingli...@gmail.com
 wrote:
 I had, in the past, a .pdf reader that also permitted me to fill in
 some information, when I received a .pdf file.
 snip
 Adobe Reader is only a reader as I assumed it would be. Some PDF
 readers can also fill in forms, do editing, etc., however not Adobe
 Reader.
 snip
 I don't know what's wrong, other than the possibility that wherever you
 got the form, they did *not* make it so that you can fill it out on your
 system. Note that *every* instance that I've done that, acroread tells me
 that I *must* print it, and that I *cannot* save it filled out.

 That, of course, is solved by the pdfprinter driver for CUPS, though that
 leaves me with a filled out, but un-re-editable document.

 And yes, I have a bunch of purchase requests that I filled out in the last
 couple of years that were like this, and yes, I used acroread.

  mark
 Mark: I now have Adobe Reader 9 installed on the M$ Windows side and
 also on the Linux side of this box. Both show among the plugins, the
 Acrobat Forms plugin is Not loaded. Possibly if that plugin can be
 loaded, in Adobe Reader, one can fill in forms.
 
 Acrobat on Linux (AdobeReader to be more precise) will indeed do forms
 but you really should disable the browser plug-in (I believe in Firefox
 lingo, they're called extensions) and you will have less memory issues
 with FF and PDF files will download and allow you to choose which
 program you use to open them (AdobeReader or /usr/bin/acroread) and life
 is generally better.
 
 Craig

Agreed.  Adobe products, at least those meant to run on Linux, are 
easily confused.  I use them minimally, if at all.
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Re: [CentOS] {SOLVED} Re: PDF Reader/Editor for CentOS 5.7 (32 bit)?

2011-09-23 Thread Lanny Marcus
On Wed, Sep 21, 2011 at 1:46 PM,  m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:
 Lanny Marcus wrote:
 On Tue, Sep 20, 2011 at 8:35 AM, Lanny Marcus lmmailingli...@gmail.com
 wrote:
 I had, in the past, a .pdf reader that also permitted me to fill in
 some information, when I received a .pdf file.
 snip
 Adobe Reader is only a reader as I assumed it would be. Some PDF
 readers can also fill in forms, do editing, etc., however not Adobe
 Reader.
 snip
 I don't know what's wrong, other than the possibility that wherever you
 got the form, they did *not* make it so that you can fill it out on your
 system. Note that *every* instance that I've done that, acroread tells me
 that I *must* print it, and that I *cannot* save it filled out.

 That, of course, is solved by the pdfprinter driver for CUPS, though that
 leaves me with a filled out, but un-re-editable document.

 And yes, I have a bunch of purchase requests that I filled out in the last
 couple of years that were like this, and yes, I used acroread.

          mark

Mark: I now have Adobe Reader 9 installed on the M$ Windows side and
also on the Linux side of this box. Both show among the plugins, the
Acrobat Forms plugin is Not loaded. Possibly if that plugin can be
loaded, in Adobe Reader, one can fill in forms.

On the Windows side, I have a Freeware program, Nitro PDF Reader 2,
that is very slick.

On the Linux side, I have  pdfedit and my guess is that if it had the
kind of Help files that Nitro PDF Reader 2 does, that pdfedit can do
most or all of the things Nitro PDF Reader 2 can do.

pdfedit will do what I need to do, unless and until I find something
better, that installs easily on CentOS 5.7  Thanks again for your
help! Lanny
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Re: [CentOS] {SOLVED} Re: PDF Reader/Editor for CentOS 5.7 (32 bit)?

2011-09-23 Thread Craig White
On Fri, 2011-09-23 at 12:47 -0500, Lanny Marcus wrote:
 On Wed, Sep 21, 2011 at 1:46 PM,  m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:
  Lanny Marcus wrote:
  On Tue, Sep 20, 2011 at 8:35 AM, Lanny Marcus lmmailingli...@gmail.com
  wrote:
  I had, in the past, a .pdf reader that also permitted me to fill in
  some information, when I received a .pdf file.
  snip
  Adobe Reader is only a reader as I assumed it would be. Some PDF
  readers can also fill in forms, do editing, etc., however not Adobe
  Reader.
  snip
  I don't know what's wrong, other than the possibility that wherever you
  got the form, they did *not* make it so that you can fill it out on your
  system. Note that *every* instance that I've done that, acroread tells me
  that I *must* print it, and that I *cannot* save it filled out.
 
  That, of course, is solved by the pdfprinter driver for CUPS, though that
  leaves me with a filled out, but un-re-editable document.
 
  And yes, I have a bunch of purchase requests that I filled out in the last
  couple of years that were like this, and yes, I used acroread.
 
   mark
 
 Mark: I now have Adobe Reader 9 installed on the M$ Windows side and
 also on the Linux side of this box. Both show among the plugins, the
 Acrobat Forms plugin is Not loaded. Possibly if that plugin can be
 loaded, in Adobe Reader, one can fill in forms.

Acrobat on Linux (AdobeReader to be more precise) will indeed do forms
but you really should disable the browser plug-in (I believe in Firefox
lingo, they're called extensions) and you will have less memory issues
with FF and PDF files will download and allow you to choose which
program you use to open them (AdobeReader or /usr/bin/acroread) and life
is generally better.

Craig



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Re: [CentOS] {SOLVED} Re: PDF Reader/Editor for CentOS 5.7 (32 bit)?

2011-09-21 Thread m . roth
Lanny Marcus wrote:
 On Tue, Sep 20, 2011 at 8:35 AM, Lanny Marcus lmmailingli...@gmail.com
 wrote:
 I had, in the past, a .pdf reader that also permitted me to fill in
 some information, when I received a .pdf file.
snip
 Adobe Reader is only a reader as I assumed it would be. Some PDF
 readers can also fill in forms, do editing, etc., however not Adobe
 Reader.
snip
I don't know what's wrong, other than the possibility that wherever you
got the form, they did *not* make it so that you can fill it out on your
system. Note that *every* instance that I've done that, acroread tells me
that I *must* print it, and that I *cannot* save it filled out.

That, of course, is solved by the pdfprinter driver for CUPS, though that
leaves me with a filled out, but un-re-editable document.

And yes, I have a bunch of purchase requests that I filled out in the last
couple of years that were like this, and yes, I used acroread.

  mark

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