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CPC Information on Acrobat ®
Reader
Concordant Expositions
in PDF Format
The free Acrobat Reader is one of the finest and most useful browser
plug-ins available. Its Portable Document Format (PDF) has become
the de facto standard in professional publishing. This is because Acrobat technology
allows its users to distribute the same high-quality documents over the Web as are
ordinarily available only in hard copy.
Tips for getting started with
Acrobat Reader:
Once you have installed Acrobat Reader, to view PDF
files on-line within your browser, simply click on the link pointing to the desired file
and wait for it to appear on your screen. If you wish, after viewing, you can save the
file to disk, from the File menu | Save As dialog (alternatively, to save re-downloading,
the file may be retrieved from your browsers cache directory). Or, to download a PDF file without viewing, right-click on its link, and, in Netscape,
choose Link As; or, in Internet Explorer, choose Target As.
Please note that our PDF documents are normally prepared with the Acrobat Article
feature. Article mode is indicated within Acrobat Reader by the presence of a small arrow,
enclosed within the hand cursor. In our application of this feature, when Article mode has
been encoded within a PDF document, it causes viewing conveniently
to proceed through the first column of a page, and then any additional columns on that
page, before continuing on to the next page.
When viewing, simply
click (or shift-click) on a page, to page through the document, forward or backward. If
the initial magnified image size is too large, this may be adjusted. From the Acrobat
Reader File menu | Preferences | General dialog, select, Visible
Magnification (specify, e.g., 200%); this setting will be retained for subsequent
use.
If a document, however,
has not been prepared with the Article feature (as indicated by the absence
of the small arrow within the hand cursor), clicking on a page image (whether in the
Reader or browser) will not cause the page to reappear in magnified size.
To view such a document
within the Reader in magnified size, type -shift-l (for full screen),
then -l (for desired magnification size; e.g., 160%). Type up or down arrow,
to go to the next, or preceding page; type -up or -down, to go to
the former, or following portion of the present page, and then, if typed
again, to go to the preceding, or following page itself. Type to return from
full-screen view to normal view.
When viewing such a
document within your browser, to change either the page number, currently-viewable
portion of a page, document magnification size, etc., click on the appropriate tool for
the desired function, directly within the browser window (see the Reader Online Guide
section, PDF on the Web, for further details).
The Reader plug-in's
toolbar may be repositioned at the left side, right side, or bottom of the browser's
window. Simply drag the toolbar from the top of the window to the desired location.
If your printer is a
modest one, with limited memory, care should be taken in printing PDF
files. If you have a problem printing, try printing a single page only, to see if you can
obtain good results.
Finally, please note
that even though PDF pages containing complex Concordant Version
text paint to the screen very slowly when the image size is set to 100% (ordinary
pages paint very quickly even at 100%), Concordant Version text will paint far more
efficiently (and quite reasonably) if the viewable image is set larger, e.g., at 200%,
as is more desirable for on-screen reading, anyway. Alternatively, you may obtain
efficient text-painting even of such complex typography with a single click of the mouse,
by clicking on the rightmost of the three page icons within the Acrobat
Readers icon bar (this will set the image size to 125%).
Return to
Concordant Publishing PDF page
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